Technologies used: ES6 (via Babel) React Redux Electron Cordova SCSS Jest (Testing suite) React Scripts
This project currently requires version 14.21.3
of node, and version 8.3.2
of npm. These are the only supported versions for this project.
As a convenience, the repository contains a .node-version
file that enables convinient use of a node environment manager.
There are some additional requirements for the MDNS native dependency.
- Run powershell as admin (right-click option) and then run:
npm --add-python-to-path install --global windows-build-tools
- Install Bonjour SDK for Windows
(requires an apple id associated with a paid team account). Select "Bonjour SDK for Windows v.3.0".
BONJOUR_SDK_HOME
should be set for you after installation completes. - Restart powershell and continue with project installation.
Once you've completed npm install
, you will need to rebuild MDNS with the Electron headers:
cd node_modules\mdns
npx node-gyp rebuild --target=9.0.0 --arch=x64 --dist-url=https://electronjs.org/headers
target
must match the electron version installed by npm
On Debian like systems, you may need to enable ipv6 dns resolution. Do this by ensuring:
hosts: files mdns4_minimal mdns6_minimal [NOTFOUND=return] dns
Is added to to /etc/msswitch.conf
.
- Native dependencies won't compile
windows-build-tools
should have installed the required compilers- MS notes on config for native modules
- ...You could install python and VS Build Tools manually; you should not need all of Visual Studio
- Runtime error related to DLL initialization
- Make sure the "rebuild" step above works
- More Info
- MDNS doesn't work on linux (getaddr
- Try adding
hosts: files mdns4_minimal mdns6_minimal [NOTFOUND=return] dns
to/etc/msswitch.conf
- Try adding
- Install the correct node and npm versions.
- Clone this repository.
- Fetch submodules by typing
git submodule update --init --recursive -f
. - Enter the directory where the repository is cloned, and install the project dependencies by typing
npm install
. - Refer to the development tasks section below to learn how to test and build the app.
Note: for Apple Silicon users, you need to install the electron
package manually:
npm install electron --arch=x64
npm run <script> |
Description |
---|---|
start:[platform] |
Serves your app at localhost:3000 targeted at the platform you specify. |
dev:[platform] |
Run a live-reloading build of the app, targeted at the platform you specify. Requires the live server to be running (see start task). |
build:[platform] |
Compiles assets and prepares app for production on the given platform. |
test |
Runs testing suite. |
generate-icons |
Uses icon-gen package to generate iconsets and icon files for OSX and Windows. |
dist:[platform] |
Uses electron-packager or cordova to package a release for the specified platform. |
lint |
Lints the project according to our eslint configuration |
sass-lint |
Lints the project's SASS files only, according to our sass-lint configuration. |
- In-browser development:
npm start
- Platform-specific development:
npm run start:[platform]
andnpm run dev:[platform]
, whereplatform
is one ofandroid
,electron
, orios
.- Currently, you can only run one platform at a time
See below for installation, options, and information on platform specifics.
- Install cordova on your system:
npm install -g cordova
- If you haven't already, build the project:
npm run build
- Without the
www/
directory, cordova commands won't recognize this as a valid project.
- Install platforms and plugins for the project:
cordova prepare
See Cordova's iOS docs and Android docs for requirements, configuration, and deploy instructions.
Starting the web app: If you have a running webpack dev server (started with npm start
), you can run dev cordova builds on devices & emulators with live reloading.
Starting a device or simulator: Run npm run dev:[android|ios]
. This is a thin wrapper around cordova run [android|ios]
; you can pass arguments to the cordova script with an extra pair of dashes. For example: npm run dev:android -- --emulator
, or npm run dev:ios -- --target="iPad-Pro, 11.4"
. Changes will be picked up from the dev server.
This assumes you have the relevant platform development tools installed. For a list of Apple simulator types ("iPad-Pro") and runtimes ("11.4"), try xcrun simctl list
.
Known issue & caveat: this requires temporarily changing config.xml
contents to build a development app; if everything goes well, the changes are cleaned up upon completion. However, a Cordova build error (for example) can leave config.xml in this 'development' state.
To get full Cordova support, with native integration & plugins:
- (one time)
cordova build [android|ios]
to install cordova deps, plugins, and static (public) app resources npm run start:[android|ios]
to start the dev server (React app)npm run dev:[android|ios]
as above
However, this comes with some limitations:
- You can only to run dev server content from a device or simulator on that platform. (Running simultaneous android clients is fine; running electron concurrently requires starting another server in another directory.)
- All 'public' files, including protocols, are statically bundled with the app. These are sourced from the
www
directory in the cordova build step, so changes to any file in public requires a fullnpm build
and then restarting the dev device as above.
npm run start:electron
starts the dev server (React app)npm run dev:electron
start Electron, pointed at the dev server
Troubleshooting:
- If a dev cordova build is interrupted, you may find that
config.xml
has changes, and that there's aconfig.xml.original
file (ignored by git). You may restore the contents ofconfig.xml
from git or the original, and delete the '.original' file. - The webpack dev server writes a
.devserver
file on startup, which is removed when it exits. The file is used by the cordova dev build; it should contain the LAN URL of the running dev server. - Apple sillicon users may encounter a node-sass runtime error:
(mach-o file, but is an incompatible architecture (have 'x86_64', need 'arm64'))
, you can fix this by rebuilding node-sass for your platform:
npm rebuild node-sass
Electron supports extensions to Chrome devtools such as Redux DevTools.
In the development environment, these will be loaded if you provide one or more paths to your extensions (semicolon-separated) in the NC_DEVTOOLS_EXTENSION_PATH
environment variable. The electron docs describe how to find the filepath for an extension once installed.
Example: enabling Redux Devtools on macOS:
NC_DEVTOOLS_EXTENSION_PATH=~/Library/Application\ Support/Google/Chrome/Default/Extensions/lmhkpmbekcpmknklioeibfkpmmfibljd/2.15.2_0 npm run electron:dev
.
├── config # Project and build configurations (webpack, env config)
├── public # Static public assets
│ └── index.html # Static entry point
├── src # Application source code
│ ├── index.js # Application bootstrap and rendering
│ ├── routes.js # App Route Definitions
│ ├── components # Contains directories for components
│ ├── containers # Contains directories for containers for native and base classes
│ ├── ducks # Middleware, modules (ducks-style with actions, reducers, and action creators), and store
│ └── utils # Helpers and utils
├── www # Build output from webpack