I have an electron app that's supposed to work for multiple (business) clients. I'd like to generate different app versions for each client.
For example I want to run something like
npm run electron:build -- --client=Foo
and have Foo inside a header for example in the bundled application.
Related
I'm trying to follow other people who had a similar issue like this one
Electron-Builder include external folder I wish i could be more specific on what my problem is, the reason is that i dont know whats wrong.
I am making a react app which has a server with an sqlite db and im trying to use electron.js to make it into an installable/executable
here is my dummy repo https://github.com/Juan321654/electron_react_with_build_installer_sqlite_db the master branch was just how to make electron work with react, the server branch is the one that i need help with
you can clone and just do npm i, npm run start to launch executable. npm run build to build
the code works fine in development mode and even after i make the build project with electron i can launch the executable and it works fine and it reads the data from the database, but as soon as i take the dist folder out of the project to send to someone or install the software, it stops working and it loads the app, but it does not read the data from the server/db, I am not sure if its missing node modules or the server folder, or maybe if im missing some kind of command in my scripts in the package.json?
With the expiration of Dartium that happened just a few days ago, I felt compelled to migrate from dart 1.24.3 to Dart2, even though it is still in dev.
I have although hit a few walls doing so, one of them being related to the architecture of my apps.
I run a nodeJs server, which also acts as a webserver with client side dart.
The problem that I experience with the new dart SDK is that in order for the .dart files to be read in Chrome, they must be served using webdev serve or build_runner serve.
Obviously, these 2 commands act as the file server, which is not what I want since I'm using a nodeJS server.
By using build_runner watch I think I am enabling the build and watch of the .dart files into .dart.js inside of the following directory :
.dart_tool/build/generated//lib
I am also able to serve them from my nodeJS server. What remains is the package directory, I can't seem to find where pub serves gets the following package files:
/packages/$sdk/dev_compiler/amd/require.js
/packages/$sdk/dev_compiler/amd/dart_sdk.js
Does anyone know what build_runner serve does to include them?
Thank you,
There are 2 options for using a different server during development.
Run build_runner serve on a different port and proxy the requests to it from your other server. This has the benefit of delaying requests while a build is ongoing so you don't get an inconsistent set of assets.
Run build_runner watch --output web:build and use the created build/ directory to serve files from. This will include a build/packages directory that has these files in it.
These files are served from the lib directory of the dart sdk itself.
Note that there is another option, which is to use the -o option from build_runner. This will create a merged directory with source and generated files, which you can serve directly without relying on any internal file layout.
I'm using pub serve to run my page. I noticed that there are tools like lite-server for npm, that make sure that after file contents are changed, the web page is automatically refreshed.
Anyone got something like that working for dart using pub serve? I thought maybe some grinder script with the watcher package could make that work?
Pub should handle monitoring and autodeployment of changes itself when run in debug or release mode.
You can verify this works correctly by issuing from your project root
pub serve
then make a change to a html or dart file and verify that the project is automatically rebuilt.
If this is not working, you might try experimenting with the --force-poll option when running pub serve. Per documentation:
--[no-]force-poll Force the use of a polling filesystem watcher.
I have an iOS application that relies on a web server to keep track of information like players and games. Is there some way I can have XCode restart the server every time I start the app in the simulator? I am using Django so starting the server involves one terminal command.
Go to you target settings and add a Build Phase.
You can set an arbitrary script that runs at every build.
Here's an example taken from one of my projects:
Simply click on the Add Build Phase icon on the bottom right and select Add Run Script.
As you can easily find out by yourself, you can specify the shell to run the script into, as well as other handy options.
In your specific case a simple oneliner
python manage.py runserver
would probably do the trick
I'd like to know if there is any way to develop continuously with Trigger.io and avoid the forge build step with every file change I want to test in my browser or simulator.
I was faced with the same problem and I've got a working solution that uses watchr and watch to automatically rebuild each time I make a change to a source file. If you are running a "web" version of your app you can make a change to a source file and go directly to your browser and see the effect of your changes fairly quickly depending on how long the build takes.
Prerequisites: Ruby, watchr, Unix 'watch', and a terminal.
gem install watchr.
create a new ruby file for watchr to know what files to monitor and what to do when it sees a change. I named my file 'my_watch.rb': https://gist.github.com/3153167
open two terminals. Terminal 1 will run watchr and Terminal two will run 'forge build ...'.
In terminal 1 run 'watchr my_watch.rb' making sure the path to my_watch.rb is correct and make sure you've edited my_watch.rb according to your setup so that the path inside watch(...) reflects the files to be watched. My example watches all files in the same directory (and beneath) as the my_watch.rb script. You can place my_watch.rb in the 'src' folder of your Trigger.io app if you want to match my example and run watchr my_watch.rb directly from the src folder. Also not the shell command and path in the block need to be updated to reflect your environment. Again, in my example 'my_watch.rb' is inside 'src/' so when a change is detected we go up one directory and call 'forge build'.
I tend to develop actively with the 'web' version of my app so I can just open terminal 2 to my forge project directory and 'forge run web'. When I am testing in simulators and on devices, yes I have to run forge build every time I want to see a change. However, I typically don't have to wait for forge build to finish because watchr kicked off the build as soon as I made a change and it happens pretty quickly.
I know this is not an ideal solution but so far developing new features in the 'web' version first and then implementing in mobile versions has been very smooth for me. I've never needed to kill the 'web' version after a build but I maybe just lucky. As for running build each time you want to test the mobile versions if you are good with your keyboard shortcuts it really isn't bad at all. XCode makes you build and run after changes are made to source code when creating native iOS apps so I don't think Trigger is unique in requiring this build step.
I hope this helps and that my answer isn't too specific to me and my setup.
The build phase makes some changes to your source to enable the forge.* APIs - therefore, trying to just use the raw files in your src directory won't work.
You may be tempted to change files directly in the development directory, but this is a pretty bad idea: we delete those files with impunity when we need to!
We have plans on our medium-term roadmap to add a file-system watcher to start builds automatically when changes have occurred.
In the meantime, I just use forge build && forge run PLATFORM which tends to only take a few seconds...
while not perfect... this works for me.
go into development/web
rm src
link to your root src, ie ln -s ../../src src
copy the all.js from the web/forge and add to your index.html
ie
start nodemon web.js
open in browser.
note you will need to comment out the all.js script tag for non web builds.