A simple app for check status CI status using Electron JS. For now BuildCheckerApp works with all CI/CD servers that response a CCTray XML file.
Electron app based on React, Redux, React Router, Webpack, React Transform HMR for rapid application development
- Public repositories:
https://api.travis-ci.org/repos/<owner>/<repository>/cc.xml
- Private repositories:
https://api.travis-ci.com/repositories/<owner>/<repository>.xml?token=<token>
- Public/private repositories:
https://snap-ci.com/<owner>/<repository>/branch/<branchname>/cctray.xml
- Public/private repositories:
https://circleci.com/gh/<owner>/<repository>.cc.xml?circle-token=<token>
The Wercker CI use HTTP basic auth in your cctray url. For solve this, please use a trick using the URL itself, as specified in RFC 1738. Simply pass the user/pass before the host with an @
sign.
- Public/private repositories:
https://<your-wercker-username>:<your-wercker-password>@app.wercker.com/api/v2/applications/<your-wercker-project-id>/cc/build
For know more about the
<your-wercker-project-id>
, please access the post on Wercker Blog "Build and deploy status notification with the cctray feed"
First, clone the repo via git:
git clone https://github.com/willmendesneto/build-checker-app.git <your-project-name>
And then install dependencies.
$ cd <your-project-name> && yarn install
Points to share
- Please check
.nvmrc
file. Please run the specific node and npm versions for use this repository; - Please make sure that you have Yarn package managemnt installed globally;
$ npm install -g yarn@0.23.4
Run this two commands simultaneously in different console tabs.
$ npm run build-css
$ npm run hot-server
$ npm run start-hot
or run two servers with one command
$ npm run dev
Note: requires a node version >= 4 and an npm version >= 2.
If you are running the app in a unix environment, there's an issue about some specific operational system versions (until right now only happens in Ubuntu 0.14) that is about the integration between ElectronJS Tray component and OS. To solve this you need to install libappindicator1
package using this command.
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install libappindicator1
If you find issues, please feel free to create a new issue in the repository :)
If you use any 3rd party libraries which can't be built with webpack, you must list them in your webpack.config.base.js
:
externals: [
// put your node 3rd party libraries which can't be built with webpack here (mysql, mongodb, and so on..)
]
You can find those lines in the file.
This boilerplate out of the box is configured to use css-modules.
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
$ npm run package
To package apps for all platforms:
$ npm run package-all
- --name, -n: Application name (default: ElectronReact)
- --version, -v: Electron version (default: latest version)
- --asar, -a: asar support (default: false)
- --icon, -i: Application icon
- --all: pack for all platforms
Use electron-packager
to pack your app with --all
options for darwin (osx), linux and win32 (windows) platform. After build, you will find them in release
folder. Otherwise, you will only find one for your os.
test
, tools
, release
folder and devDependencies in package.json
will be ignored by default.
We add some module's peerDependencies
to ignore option as default for application size reduction.
babel-core
is required bybabel-loader
and its size is ~19 MBnode-libs-browser
is required bywebpack
and its size is ~3MB.
Note: If you want to use any above modules in runtime, for example:
require('babel/register')
, you should move them fromdevDependencies
todependencies
.
Please checkout Building windows apps from non-windows platforms.