- Note: requires a node version >= 7 and an npm version >= 4.
First, clone the repo via git:
git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/Block-Equity/desktop-wallet
And then install dependencies with yarn.
$ cd your-project-name
$ npm install
$ cd app && npm install
Start the app in the dev
environment. This starts the renderer process in hot-module-replacement mode and starts a webpack dev server that sends hot updates to the renderer process:
$ npm run dev
Alternatively, you can run the renderer and main processes separately. This way, you can restart one process without waiting for the other. Run these two commands simultaneously in different console tabs:
$ npm run start-renderer-dev
$ npm run start-main-dev
To package apps for the local platform:
$ npm run package
To package apps for all platforms:
First, refer to Multi Platform Build for dependencies.
Then,
$ npm run package-all
If you run into errors, try cleaning up using the following:
xattr -cr *
To package apps with options:
$ npm run package -- --[option]
To generate icons for production build, install this package: https://github.com/jaretburkett/electron-icon-maker
Install, globally or local:
npm install -g electron-icon-maker
Then (paths are your own, ofcourse):
electron-icon-maker --input=/Users/meghadhall/Desktop/icon.png --output=/Users/meghadhall/Desktop/desktopappicons
To run End-to-End Test
$ npm run build
$ npm run test-e2e
💡 You can debug your production build with devtools by simply setting the DEBUG_PROD
env variable:
DEBUG_PROD=true npm run package
You will need to add other modules to this boilerplate, depending on the requirements of your project. For example, you may want to add node-postgres to communicate with PostgreSQL database, or material-ui to reuse react UI components.
This boilerplate uses a two package.json structure. This means, you will have two package.json
files.
./package.json
in the root of your project./app/package.json
insideapp
folder
Rule of thumb is: all modules go into ./package.json
except native modules. Native modules go into ./app/package.json
.
- If the module is native to a platform (like node-postgres) or otherwise should be included with the published package (i.e. bcrypt, openbci), it should be listed under
dependencies
in./app/package.json
. - If a module is
import
ed by another module, include it independencies
in./package.json
. See this ESLint rule. Examples of such modules arematerial-ui
,redux-form
, andmoment
. - Otherwise, modules used for building, testing and debugging should be included in
devDependencies
in./package.json
.
See the wiki page, Module Structure — Two package.json Structure to understand what is native module, the rationale behind two package.json structure and more.
For an example app that uses this boilerplate and packages native dependencies, see erb-sqlite-example.
This boilerplate is configured to use css-modules out of the box.
All .css
file extensions will use css-modules unless it has .global.css
.
If you need global styles, stylesheets with .global.css
will not go through the
css-modules loader. e.g. app.global.css
If you want to import global css libraries (like bootstrap
), you can just write the following code in .global.css
:
@import "~bootstrap/dist/css/bootstrap.css";
If you want to use Sass in your app, you only need to import .sass
files instead of .css
once:
import './app.global.scss';
This project comes with Flow support out of the box! You can annotate your code with types, get Flow errors as ESLint errors, and get type errors during runtime during development. Types are completely optional.