app | ||
test | ||
.gitignore | ||
.travis.yml | ||
cli.js | ||
collaborators.md | ||
common.js | ||
CONTRIBUTING.md | ||
index.js | ||
LICENSE | ||
linux.js | ||
mac.js | ||
package.json | ||
README.md | ||
tempDir.js | ||
usage.txt | ||
win32.js |
Nativefier
Introduction
Packages and wraps a single-page web app in an Electron OS executable (.app, .exe, etc) via the command line.
Simply a fork with a small layer of abstraction on top of electron-packager for the command line.
I did this because I was tired of having to ⌘-tab or alt-tab
to my browser and then search through the numerous tabs open when I was using Whatsapp Web or Facebook Messenger.
Notes
Tested only on OSX, but should work for windows and linux
Back Button
A back button is intentionally not provided because the tool is designed for single page apps. However, if desired, an executable can built for any url, and simply pressing the backspace
key will take the user back to the previous page.
Installation
# for use from cli
$ npm install nativefier -g
Usage
Usage: nativefier <appname> <target> --platform=<platform> --arch=<arch> --version=<version>
Required options
appname name for the app
target target url for the single page app
platform all, or one or more of: linux, win32, darwin (comma-delimited if multiple)
arch all, ia32, x64
version see https://github.com/atom/electron/releases
Example nativefier Messenger --target=http://messenger.com --platform=darwin --arch=x64 --version=0.28.2
Optional options
all equivalent to --platform=all --arch=all
out the dir to put the app into at the end. defaults to current working dir
icon the icon file to use as the icon for the app (should be a .icns file on OSX)
app-bundle-id bundle identifier to use in the app plist
app-version version to set for the app
helper-bundle-id bundle identifier to use in the app helper plist
ignore do not copy files into App whose filenames regex .match this string
prune runs `npm prune --production` on the app
overwrite if output directory for a platform already exists, replaces it rather than skipping it
asar packages the source code within your app into an archive
sign should contain the identity to be used when running `codesign` (OS X only)
version-string should contain a hash of the application metadata to be embedded into the executable (Windows only).
These can be specified on the command line via dot notation,
e.g. --version-string.CompanyName="Company Inc." --version-string.ProductName="Product"
Keys supported:
- CompanyName
- LegalCopyright
- FileDescription
- OriginalFilename
- FileVersion
- ProductVersion
- ProductName
- InternalName
badge if the target app should show badges in the OSX dock on receipt of desktop notifications
width window width (default=1280)
height window height (default=800)
See electron-packager for more details.
Icon
On OSX, the icon parameter should be a path to an .icns
file. 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.
OSX Dock Badge
On OSX, it is desired for the App dock icon to show a badge on the receipt of a desktop notification.
There is no known way to intercept and set an event listener for a desktop notification triggered by the <webview>
, the current workaround is to listen for document.title
changes within the <webview>
. Typical web apps like Facebook Messenger will change the document.title
to "John sent a message..." on the receipt of a desktop notification, and this is what we will listen for to trigger the app badge on the dock.
However, this would cause issues when the command line argument target
is set to a external page which is not a single page app, because clicking on hyperlinks and switching pages would naturally change the document.title
. Hence, --badge
is an optional command argument that can be set by the user if the side effect of this workaround is understood.
Examples
Creating an native wrapper for Facebook Messenger with the following arguments:
- App Name:
Messenger
- Target Url:
http://messenger.com
- Platform:
darwin
(OSX) - Architecture:
x64
- Electron Version:
0.29.1
- Override existing app (if any)
- OSX dock badges on (See notes above)
$ nativefier Messenger http://messenger.com --platform=darwin --arch=x64 --version=0.29.1 --overwrite --badge
Issues
- Better workaround for desktop notifications and OSX dock badges