Open marcialwushu opened 4 years ago
After you are done building your app and it’s for desktops, you need to package and distribute it. The electron packager tool will allow packaging our code into an executable for desktop platforms — including Windows (win32), MacOS (Darwin), and Linux. Keep in mind, there are several other electron packaging tools that might better fit your needs.
npm install electron-packager -g
npm install electron-packager — save-dev
In this electron packager tutorial we will look at how to create MacOS, Windows and Linux executables with an app icon. This is also a continuation of the Electron app icon post, so start there if you haven’t read it (It’s short, i promise).
I add this code to the Electron tutorial app on github. Just look at that repo if you want to see all the code.
In this tutorial I package the application on Windows, macOS and Ubuntu Linux. There are some information about building Windows apps from non-Windows platforms in the Electron packager readme.
1. Install Electron packager
Electron packager is created by electron-userland and this is what they say about it:
So lets go ahead and install it. Run these commands in the terminal in the app folder:
2. Setting productname and electron version
Electron packager looks for a product name in package.json, so lets go ahead and add one. We also need to add what version of electron to package the app with.
Lets begin with the electron version. We’ll add that from the terminal with this command:
Now when that is done open up package.json and add a productname:
3. Building MacOS, Windows and Linux package from the terminal
To get to know what all these flags do, and what more flags exists you can read the electron-packager api.
MacOS
Now you can run this command from the terminal to build a package for mac:
Windows
And to build for Windows you can run this from the git bash:
Linux
overwrite: replaces any existing output directory when packaging.
platform: The target platform to build for
arch: the architecture to build for
icon: sets the icon for the app
prune: runs npm prune –production before packaging the app. It removes unnecesary packages.
out: the name of the directory where the packages are created.
4. Shortcuts
To make it easier to create new builds we can create scripts in package.json so that we don’t have to remember all these settings. Add the scripts below, making your package.json look like this:
Now you can run:
ORIGINAL