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mirror of https://github.com/Llewellynvdm/nativefier.git synced 2024-06-19 12:02:21 +00:00
nativefier/README.md
Ronan Jouchet c9ee6667d4
Revamp and move to TypeScript (#898)
## Breaking changes

- Require **Node >= 8.10.0 and npm 5.6.0**
- Move to **Electron 8.1.1**.
- That's it. Lots of care went into breaking CLI & programmatic behavior
  as little as possible. **Please report regressions**.
- Known issue: build may fail behind a proxy. Get in touch if you use one:
  https://github.com/jiahaog/nativefier/issues/907#issuecomment-596144768

## Changes summary

Nativefier didn't get much love recently, to the point that it's
becoming hard to run on recent Node, due to old dependencies.
Also, some past practices now seem weird, as better expressible
by modern JS/TS, discouraging contributions including mine.

Addressing this, and one thing leading to another, came a
bigger-than-expected revamp, aiming at making Nativefier more
**lean, stable, future-proof, user-friendly and dev-friendly**,
while **not changing the CLI/programmatic interfaces**. Highlights:

- **Require Node>=8**, as imposed by many of our dependencies. Node 8
  is twice LTS, and easily available even in conservative Linux distros.
  No reason not to demand it.
- **Default to Electron 8**.
- **Bump** all dependencies to latest version, including electron-packager.
- **Move to TS**. TS is great. As of today, I see no reason not to use it,
  and fight interface bugs at runtime rather than at compile time.
  With that, get rid of everything Babel/Webpack.
- **Move away from Gulp**. Gulp's selling point is perf via streaming,
  but for small builds like Nativefier, npm tasks are plenty good
  and less dependency bloat. Gulp was the driver for this PR: broken
  on Node 12, and I didn't feel like just upgrading and keeping it.
- Add tons of **verbose logs** everywhere it makes sense, to have a
  fine & clear trace of the program flow. This will be helpful to
  debug user-reported issues, and already helped me fix a few bugs.
    - With better simple logging, get rid of the quirky and buggy
      progress bar based on package `progress`. Nice logging (minimal
      by default, the verbose logging mentioned above is only used
      when passing `--verbose`) is better and one less dependency.
- **Dump `async` package**, a relic from old callback-hell early Node.
  Also dump a few other micro-packages unnecessary now.
- A first pass of code **cleanup** thanks to modern JS/TS features:
  fixes, simplifications, jsdoc type annotations to types, etc.
- **Remove GitHub integrations Hound & CodeClimate**, which are more
  exotic than good'ol'linters, and whose signal-to-noise ratio is too low.
- Quality: **Add tests** and add **Windows + macOS CI builds**.
  Also, add a **manual test script**, helping to quickly verify the
  hard-to-programatically-test stuff before releases, and limit regressions.
- **Fix a very small number of existing bugs**. The goal of this PR was
  *not* to fix bugs, but to get Nativefier in better shape to do so.
  Bugfixes will come later. Still, these got addressed:
  - Add common `Alt`+`Left`/`Right` for previous/next navigation.
  - Improve #379: fix zoom with `Ctrl` + numpad `+`/`-`
  - Fix pinch-to-zoom (see https://github.com/jiahaog/nativefier/issues/379#issuecomment-598612128 )
2020-03-15 16:50:01 -04:00

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# Nativefier
[![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/jiahaog/nativefier.svg)](https://travis-ci.org/jiahaog/nativefier)
[![npm version](https://badge.fury.io/js/nativefier.svg)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/nativefier)
![Dock](dock.png)
You want to make a native wrapper for WhatsApp Web (or any web page).
```bash
nativefier web.whatsapp.com
```
![Walkthrough animation](walkthrough.gif)
You're done.
## Table of Contents
- [Installation](#installation)
- [Usage](#usage)
- [How it works](#how-it-works)
- [Development](docs/development.md)
- [License](#license)
## Introduction
Nativefier is a command-line tool to easily create a desktop application for any web site with succinct and minimal configuration. Apps are wrapped by [Electron](https://www.electronjs.org/) in an OS executable (`.app`, `.exe`, etc.) for use on Windows, macOS and Linux.
I did this because I was tired of having to `⌘-tab` or `alt-tab` to my browser and then search through the numerous open tabs when I was using [Facebook Messenger](https://messenger.com) or [Whatsapp Web](https://web.whatsapp.com) ([relevant Hacker News thread](https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=10930718)).
[Changelog](https://github.com/jiahaog/nativefier/blob/master/CHANGELOG.md). [Developer docs](https://github.com/jiahaog/nativefier/blob/master/docs/development.md).
Features:
- Automatically retrieves the correct icon and app name.
- JavaScript and CSS injection.
- Many more, see the [API docs](docs/api.md) or `nativefier --help`
## Installation
- macOS 10.9+ / Windows / Linux
- [Node.js](https://nodejs.org/) `>=8`
- Optional dependencies:
- [ImageMagick](http://www.imagemagick.org/) to convert icons. Make sure `convert` and `identify` are in your `$PATH`.
- [Wine](https://www.winehq.org/) to package Windows apps under non-Windows platforms. Make sure `wine` is in your `$PATH`.
```bash
npm install nativefier -g
```
## Usage
Creating a native desktop app for [medium.com](https://medium.com):
```bash
nativefier "medium.com"
```
Nativefier will attempt to determine the app name, your OS and processor architecture, among other options. If desired, the app name or other options can be overwritten by specifying the `--name "Medium"` as part of the command line options:
```bash
nativefier --name "Some Awesome App" "medium.com"
```
Read the [API documentation](docs/api.md) (or `nativefier --help`) for other command-line flags that can be used to configure the packaged app.
To have high-resolution icons used by default for an app/domain, please contribute to the [icon repository](https://github.com/jiahaog/nativefier-icons)!
Note that the application menu is hidden by default for a minimal UI. You can press the `alt` keyboard key to access it.
## How it works
A template app with the appropriate plumbing is included in the `./app` folder. When `nativefier` is run, this template is parameterized, and packaged using [Electron Packager](https://github.com/electron-userland/electron-packager).
In addition, I built [GitCloud](https://github.com/jiahaog/gitcloud) to use GitHub as an icon index, and also the [pageIcon](https://github.com/jiahaog/page-icon) fallback to infer a relevant icon from a URL.
## Development
Help welcome on [bugs](https://github.com/jiahaog/nativefier/issues?q=is%3Aissue+label%3Abug) and [feature requests](https://github.com/jiahaog/nativefier/issues?q=is%3Aissue+label%3A%22feature+request%22)!
Get started with our docs: [Development](docs/development.md), [API](docs/api.md).
## Docker Image
The [Dockerfile](Dockerfile) is designed to be used like the "normal" nativefier app. By default, the command `nativefier --help` will be executed. Before you can use the image, you have to build it:
docker build -t local/nativefier .
After that, you can build your first nativefier app to the local `$TARGET-PATH`. Ensure you have write access to the `$TARGET-PATH`:
docker run -v $TARGET-PATH:/target local/nativefier https://my-web-app.com/ /target/
You can also pass nativefier flags, and mount additional volumes to provide local files. For example, to use a icon:
docker run -v $PATH_TO_ICON/:/src -v $TARGET-PATH:/target local/nativefier --icon /src/icon.png --name whatsApp -p linux -a x64 https://my-web-app.com/ /target/
## License
[MIT](LICENSE.md)