Welcome, soon-to-be contributor 🙂! This document sums up what you need to know to get started hacking on Nativefier.
- Before starting work on a huge change, gauge the interest of community & maintainers through a GitHub issue. For big changes, create a RFC issue to enable a good peer review.
- Do your best to avoid adding new Nativefier command-line options. If a new option is inevitable for what you want to do, sure, but as much as possible try to see if you change works without. Nativefier already has a ton of them, making it hard to use.
- Avoid or limit adding npm dependencies. Each new dependency is a complexity & security liability.
- Use types, avoid
any, write tests. In that order. - Document for users in API.md
- Document for other devs in comments, jsdoc, commits, PRs. Say why more than what, the what is your code!
First, clone the project:
git clone https://github.com/nativefier/nativefier.git
cd nativefierInstall dependencies (for both the CLI and the Electron app):
npm installThe above npm install will build automatically (through the prepare hook).
When you need to re-build Nativefier,
npm run buildSet up a symbolic link so that running nativefier calls your dev version with your changes:
npm link
which nativefier
# -> Should return a path, e.g. /home/youruser/.node_modules/lib/node_modules/nativefier
# If not, be sure your `npm_config_prefix` env var is set and in your `PATH`After doing so, you can run Nativefier with your test parameters:
nativefier --your-awesome-new-flag 'https://your-test-site.com'Then run your nativefier app through the command line too (to see logs & errors):
# Under Linux
./your-test-site-linux-x64/your-test-site
# Under Windows
your-test-site-win32-x64/your-test-site.exe
# Under macOS
./YourTestSite-darwin-x64/YourTestSite.app/Contents/MacOS/YourTestSite --verboseNativefier uses Prettier, which will shout at you for not formatting code exactly like it expects. This guarantees a homogenous style, but is painful to do manually. Do yourself a favor and install a Prettier plugin for your editor.
- To run all tests,
npm t - To run only unit tests,
npm run test:unit - To run only integration tests,
npm run test:integration - Logging is suppressed by default in tests, to avoid polluting Jest output.
To get debug logs,
npm run test:withlogor set theLOGLEVELenv. var. - For a good live experience, open two terminal panes/tabs running code/tests watchers:
- Run a TSC watcher:
npm run build:watch - Run a Jest unit tests watcher:
npm run test:watch
- Run a TSC watcher:
- Alternatively, you can run both test processes in the same terminal by running:
npm run watch
While on master, with no uncommitted changes, run:
npm run changelog -- $VERSION
# With no 'v'. For example: npm run changelog -- 42.5.0