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nativefier/docs/api.md
2021-03-10 23:02:51 -05:00

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API

Table of Contents

Packaging Squirrel-based installers

See PR #744 - Support packaging nativefier applications into Squirrel-based installers

Command Line

nativefier [options] <targetUrl> [dest]

Command line options are listed below.

Target Url

The url to point the application at.

[dest]

Specifies the destination directory to build the app to, defaults to the current working directory.

Help

-h, --help

Prints the usage information.

Version

-v, --version

Prints the version of your nativefier install.

[name]

-n, --name <value>

The name of the application, which will affect strings in titles and the icon.

For Linux Users: Do not put spaces if you define the app name yourself with --name, as this will cause problems (tested on Ubuntu 14.04) when pinning a packaged app to the launcher.

[platform]

-p, --platform <value>
  • Default: current operating system.
  • Can be overwritten by specifying either linux, windows, osx or mas for a Mac App Store specific build.

The alternative values win32 (for Windows) or darwin, mac (for macOS) can also be used.

[arch]

-a, --arch <value>

The processor architecture to target when building.

  • Default: the architecture of the installed version of node (usually the architecture of the build-time machine).
    • To test your default architecture you can run
      node -p "process.arch"
      
      (See https://nodejs.org/api/os.html#os_os_arch)
    • Please note: On M1 Macs, unless an arm64 version of brew is used to install nodejs, the version installed will be an x64 version run through Rosetta, and will result in an x64 app being generated. If this is not desired, either specify -a arm64 to build for M1, or re-install node with an arm64 version of brew. See https://github.com/nativefier/nativefier/issues/1089
  • Can be overridden by specifying one of: ia32, x64, armv7l, arm64.
--app-copyright <value>

The human-readable copyright line for the app. Maps to the LegalCopyright metadata property on Windows, and NSHumanReadableCopyright on OS X.

[app-version]

--app-version <value>

The release version of the application. By default the version property in the package.json is used but it can be overridden with this argument. If neither are provided, the version of Electron will be used. Maps to the ProductVersion metadata property on Windows, and CFBundleShortVersionString on OS X.

[build-version]

--build-version <value>

The build version of the application. Maps to the FileVersion metadata property on Windows, and CFBundleVersion on OS X.

[electron-version]

-e, --electron-version <value>

Electron version without the v, see https://github.com/atom/electron/releases.

[widevine]

--widevine

Use a Widevine-enabled version of Electron for DRM playback, see https://github.com/castlabs/electron-releases.

[no-overwrite]

--no-overwrite

Specifies if the destination directory should be not overwritten, defaults to false.

[conceal]

-c, --conceal

Specifies if the source code within the nativefied app should be packaged into an archive, defaults to false, read more.

[icon]

-i, --icon <path>
Packaging for Windows

The icon parameter should be a path to a .ico file.

Packaging for Linux

The icon parameter should be a path to a .png file.

Packaging for macOS

The icon parameter can either be a .icns or a .png file if the optional dependencies are installed.

If your PATH has our image-conversion dependencies (iconutil, and either ImageMagick convert + identify, or GraphicsMagick gm), Nativefier will automatically convert the .png to a .icns for you.

On MacOS 10.14+, if you have set a global shortcut that includes a Media key, the user will need to be prompted for permissions to enable these keys in System Preferences > Security & Privacy > Accessibility.

Manually Converting .icns

iConvertIcons can be used to convert .pngs, though it can be quite cumbersome.

To retrieve the .icns file from the downloaded file, extract it first and press File > Get Info. Then select the icon in the top left corner of the info window and press ⌘-C. Open Preview and press File > New from clipboard and save the .icns file. It took me a while to figure out how to do that and question why a .icns file was not simply provided in the downloaded archive.

[counter]

--counter

Use a counter that persists even with window focus for the application badge for sites that use an "(X)" format counter in the page title (i.e. Gmail).

[bounce]

--bounce

(macOS only) When the counter increases, the dock icon will bounce for one second. This only works if the --counter option is active.

[width]

--width <value>

Width of the packaged application, defaults to 1280px.

[height]

--height <value>

Height of the packaged application, defaults to 800px.

[min-width]

--min-width <value>

Minimum width of the packaged application, defaults to 0.

[min-height]

--min-height <value>

Minimum height of the packaged application, defaults to 0.

[max-width]

--max-width <value>

Maximum width of the packaged application, default is no limit.

[max-height]

--max-height <value>

Maximum height of the packaged application, default is no limit.

[x]

--x <value>

X location of the packaged application window.

[y]

--y <value>

Y location of the packaged application window.

[show-menu-bar]

-m, --show-menu-bar

Specifies if the menu bar should be shown.

[fast-quit]

-f, --fast-quit

(macOS only) Specifies to quit the app after closing all windows, defaults to false.

[user-agent]

-u, --user-agent <value>

Set the user agent to run the created app with.

[honest]

--honest

By default, Nativefier uses a preset user agent string for your OS and masquerades as a regular Google Chrome browser, so that sites like WhatsApp Web will not say that the current browser is unsupported.

If this flag is passed, it will not override the user agent.

[ignore-certificate]

--ignore-certificate

Forces the packaged app to ignore certificate errors.

[disable-gpu]

--disable-gpu

Disable hardware acceleration for the packaged application.

[ignore-gpu-blacklist]

--ignore-gpu-blacklist

Passes the ignore-gpu-blacklist flag to the Chrome engine, to allow for WebGl apps to work on non supported graphics cards.

[enable-es3-apis]

--enable-es3-apis

Passes the enable-es3-apis flag to the Chrome engine, to force the activation of WebGl 2.0.

[insecure]

--insecure

Forces the packaged app to ignore web security errors, such as Mixed Content errors when receiving HTTP content on a HTTPS site.

[internal-urls]

--internal-urls <regex>

Regular expression of URLs to consider "internal" while following a hyperlink. Internal URLs will open in Nativefier, other URLs will open in your preferred browser.

Defaults to view as "internal" two URLs that share the same base domain, once stripped of www.. For example, by default,

  • URLs from/to foo.com, app.foo.com, www.foo.com are considered internal.
  • URLs from/to abc.com and xyz.com are considered external.

[Breaking change in Nativefier 43.0.0] Finally, URLs for known login pages (e.g. accounts.google.com or login.live.com) are considered internal. This does not replace internal-urls, it complements it, and happens before your internal-urls rule is applied. So, if you already set the flag to let such auth pages open internally, you don't need to change it but it might be unnecessary.

We think this is desirable behavior and are so far unaware of cases where users might not want this. If you disagree, please chime in at PR #1124: App: Automatically consider known login pages as internal

Example of --internal-urls causing all links to Google to be considered internal:

nativefier https://google.com --internal-urls ".*?\.google\.*?"

Or, if you never expect Nativefier to open an "external" page in your OS browser,

nativefier https://google.com --internal-urls ".*?"

[block-external-urls]

--block-external-urls

Forbid navigation to URLs not considered "internal" (see '--internal-urls'). Instead of opening in an external browser, attempts to navigate to external URLs will be blocked, and an error message will be shown. Default: false

Example:

nativefier https://google.com --internal-urls ".*?\.google\.*?" --block-external-urls

Blocks navigation to any URLs except Google and its subdomains.

[proxy-rules]

--proxy-rules <value>

Proxy rules. See proxyRules for more details.

Example:

nativefier https://google.com --proxy-rules http://127.0.0.1:1080

[disk-cache-size]

--disk-cache-size <value>

Forces the maximum disk space to be used by the disk cache. Value is given in bytes.

[inject]

--inject <value>

Allows you to inject a javascript or css file. This command can be run multiple times to inject the files.

Note: The javascript file is loaded after DOMContentLoaded, so you can assume the DOM is complete & available.

Example:

nativefier http://google.com --inject ./some-js-injection.js --inject ./some-css-injection.css ~/Desktop

[full-screen]

--full-screen

Makes the packaged app start in full screen.

[maximize]

--maximize

Makes the packaged app start maximized.

[hide-window-frame]

--hide-window-frame

Disable window frame and controls.

[title-bar-style]

--title-bar-style <value>

(macOS only) Sets the style for the app's title bar. See more details at electron's Frameless Window documentation.

Consider injecting a custom CSS (via --inject) for better integration. Specifically, the CSS should specify a draggable region. For instance, if the target website has a <header> element, you can make it draggable like so.

/* site.css */

/* header is draggable... */
header {
  -webkit-app-region: drag;
}

/* but any buttons inside the header shouldn't be draggable */
header button {
  -webkit-app-region: no-drag;
}

/* perhaps move some items out of way for the traffic light */
header div:first-child {
  margin-left: 100px;
  margin-top: 25px;
}
nativefier http://google.com --inject site.css --title-bar-style 'hiddenInset'

[verbose]

--verbose

Shows detailed logs in the console.

[disable-context-menu]

--disable-context-menu

Disable the context menu

[disable-dev-tools]

--disable-dev-tools

Disable the Chrome developer tools

[crash-reporter]

--crash-reporter <value>

Enables crash reporting and set the URL to submit crash reports to

Example:

nativefier http://google.com --crash-reporter https://electron-crash-reporter.appspot.com/PROJECT_ID/create/

[zoom]

--zoom <value>

Sets a default zoom factor to be used when the app is opened, defaults to 1.0.

[single-instance]

--single-instance

Prevents application from being run multiple times. If such an attempt occurs the already running instance is brought to front.

[clear-cache]

--clear-cache

Prevents the application from preserving cache between launches.

[tray]

--tray [start-in-tray]

Application will stay as an icon in the system tray. Prevents application from being closed from clicking the window close button.

When the optional argument start-in-tray is provided, i.e. the application is started using --tray start-in-tray, the main window will not be shown on first start.

[basic-auth-username]

--basic-auth-username <value> --basic-auth-password <value>

Set basic http(s) auth via the command line to have the app automatically log you in to a protected site. Both fields are required if one is set.

[processEnvs]

--processEnvs <json-string>

a JSON string of key/value pairs to be set as environment variables before any browser windows are opened.

Example:

nativefier <your-geolocation-enabled-website> --processEnvs '{"GOOGLE_API_KEY": "<your-google-api-key>"}'

[file-download-options]

--file-download-options <json-string>

a JSON string of key/value pairs to be set as file download options. See electron-dl for available options.

Example:

nativefier <your-website> --file-download-options '{"saveAs": true}'

[always-on-top]

--always-on-top

Enable always on top for the packaged application.

[global-shortcuts]

--global-shortcuts shortcuts.json

Register global shortcuts which will trigger input events like key presses or pointer events in the application.

You may define multiple global shortcuts which can trigger a series of input events. It has the following structure:

[
  {
    // Key is passed as first argument to globalShortcut.register
    key: 'CommandOrControl+Shift+Z',
    // The input events exactly match the event config in Electron for contents.sendInputEvent(event)
    inputEvents: [
      {
        // Available event types: mouseDown, mouseUp, mouseEnter, mouseLeave, contextMenu, mouseWheel, mouseMove, keyDown, keyUp or char
        type: 'keyDown',
        // Further config depends on your event type. See docs at: https://github.com/electron/electron/blob/master/docs/api/web-contents.md#contentssendinputeventevent
        keyCode: 'Space',
      },
    ],
  },
];

Important note for using modifier keys:

If you want to trigger key events which include a modifier (Ctrl, Shift,...), you need to keyDown the modifier key first, then keyDown the actual key including the modifier key as modifier property and then keyUp both keys again. No idea what this means? See the example for MediaPreviousTrack below!

For more details, please see the Electron documentation:

Example shortcuts.json for https://deezer.com & https://soundcloud.com to get your play/pause/previous/next media keys working:

[
  {
    "key": "MediaPlayPause",
    "inputEvents": [
      {
        "type": "keyDown",
        "keyCode": "Space"
      }
    ]
  },
  {
    "key": "MediaPreviousTrack",
    "inputEvents": [
      {
        "type": "keyDown",
        "keyCode": "Shift"
      },
      {
        "type": "keyDown",
        "keyCode": "Left",
        "modifiers": ["shift"]
      },
      {
        "type": "keyUp",
        "keyCode": "Left",
        "modifiers": ["shift"]
      },
      {
        "type": "keyUp",
        "keyCode": "Shift"
      }
    ]
  },
  {
    "key": "MediaNextTrack",
    "inputEvents": [
      {
        "type": "keyDown",
        "keyCode": "Shift"
      },
      {
        "type": "keyDown",
        "keyCode": "Right",
        "modifiers": ["shift"]
      },
      {
        "type": "keyUp",
        "keyCode": "Right",
        "modifiers": ["shift"]
      },
      {
        "type": "keyUp",
        "keyCode": "Shift"
      }
    ]
  }
]

[browserwindow-options]

--browserwindow-options <json-string>

a JSON string that will be sent directly into electron BrowserWindow options. See Electron's BrowserWindow API Documentation for the complete list of options.

Example:

nativefier <your-website> --browserwindow-options '{ "webPreferences": { "defaultFontFamily": { "standard": "Comic Sans MS", "serif": "Comic Sans MS" } } }'

[darwin-dark-mode-support]

--darwin-dark-mode-support

Enables Dark Mode support on macOS 10.14+.

[background-color]

--background-color <string>

See https://electronjs.org/docs/api/browser-window#setting-backgroundcolor

Deprecated

[flash]

DEPRECATED as of 2021-03-10, will be removed at some point

There's nothing Nativefier can do to stop this treadmill, so here it goes. Flash is triply dead upstream: at Adobe, in Chrome, and now in Electron. Nativefier 43.0.0 was just released, and defaults to Electron 12, which removes support for Flash:

Removed Flash support: Chromium has removed support for Flash, which was also removed in Electron 12. See Chromium's Flash Roadmap.

Your best bet now is on Ruffle, "a Flash Player emulator built in Rust". It's usable to play .swfs, and that's what Archive.org does. It's an emulator, so it's not the real perfect deal, but it already works well for many swfs, and will get better with time.

You might still be able to use Nativefier's existing Flash flags while they work, by adding a --electron-version 11.3.0 to your flags, but it's only downhill from here and our Flash flags will be removed at some point in the future, when maintaining compatibility with old Electrons becomes impossible.

--flash

If --flash is specified, Nativefier will automatically try to determine the location of your Google Chrome flash binary. Take note that the version of Chrome on your computer should be the same as the version used by the version of Electron for the Nativefied package.

Note that if this flag is specified, the --insecure flag will be added automatically, to prevent Mixed Content errors on sites such as Twitch.tv.

--flash-path <value>

You can also specify the path to the Chrome flash plugin directly with this flag. The path can be found at chrome://plugins, under Adobe Flash Player > Location. This flag automatically enables the --flash flag.

Programmatic API

In addition to CLI flags, Nativefier offers a programmatic Node.js API.

# install and save to package.json
npm install --save nativefier

In your .js file:

var nativefier = require('nativefier').default;

// possible options, defaults unless specified otherwise
var options = {
  name: 'Web WhatsApp', // will be inferred if not specified
  targetUrl: 'http://web.whatsapp.com', // required
  platform: 'darwin', // defaults to the current system
  arch: 'x64', // defaults to the current system
  version: '0.36.4',
  out: '.',
  overwrite: false,
  asar: false, // see conceal
  icon: '~/Desktop/icon.png',
  counter: false,
  bounce: false,
  width: 1280,
  height: 800,
  showMenuBar: false,
  fastQuit: false,
  userAgent: 'Mozilla ...', // will infer a default for your current system
  ignoreCertificate: false,
  ignoreGpuBlacklist: false,
  enableEs3Apis: false,
  internalUrls: '.*?',
  blockExternalUrls: false,
  insecure: false,
  honest: false,
  zoom: 1.0,
  singleInstance: false,
  clearCache: false,
  fileDownloadOptions: {
    saveAs: true, // always show "Save As" dialog
  },
  processEnvs: {
    GOOGLE_API_KEY: '<your-google-api-key>',
  },
};

nativefier(options, function (error, appPath) {
  if (error) {
    console.error(error);
    return;
  }
  console.log('App has been nativefied to', appPath);
});

Additional packaging options for Windows

[version-string]

Object (deprecated as removed in electron-packager 9.0.0, please use the win32metadata parameter instead)

[win32metadata]

--win32metadata <json-string>

a JSON string of key/value pairs of application metadata (ProductName, InternalName, FileDescription) to embed into the executable (Windows only).

Example:

nativefier <your-geolocation-enabled-website> --win32metadata '{"ProductName": "Your Product Name", "InternalName", "Your Internal Name", "FileDescription": "Your File Description"}'
Programmatic API

Object

Object (also known as a "hash") of application metadata to embed into the executable:

  • CompanyName
  • FileDescription
  • OriginalFilename
  • ProductName
  • InternalName

(Note that win32metadata was added to electron-packager in version 8.0.0)

In your .js file:

var options = {
    ...
    win32metadata: {
      CompanyName: 'Your Company Name',
      FileDescription: 'Your File Description',
      OriginalFilename: 'Your Original Filename',
      ProductName: 'Your Product Name',
      InternalName: 'Your Internal Name'
    }
};

[disable-old-build-warning-yesiknowitisinsecure]

Disables the warning shown when opening a Nativefier app made a long time ago, using an old and probably insecure Electron. Nativefier uses the Chrome browser (through Electron), and remaining on an old version is A. performance sub-optimal and B. dangerous.

However, there are legitimate use cases to disable such a warning. For example, if you are using Nativefier to ship a kiosk app exposing an internal site (over which you have control). Under those circumstances, it is reasonable to disable this warning that you definitely don't want end-users to see.

More description about the options for nativefier can be found at the above section.