Enables implementation of Tauri commands in DotNet
The initial setup might seem a bit complicated, but it's actually quite simple.
First, create a new Tauri app as usual:
pnpm create tauri-app
pnpm i
In the root of your project, create a folder called src-dotnet
alongside src-tauri
.
Inside src-dotnet
, create a .NET class library, e.g.:
cd src-dotnet
dotnet new classlib --name MyApp.TauriPlugIn
cd ..
Make sure the name of your class library ends with .TauriPlugIn
.
Add the following PropertyGroup to the .csproj
file:
<PropertyGroup>
<OutputPath>..\..\src-tauri\target\$(Configuration)\dotnet</OutputPath>
<AppendTargetFrameworkToOutputPath>false</AppendTargetFrameworkToOutputPath>
<CopyLocalLockFileAssemblies>true</CopyLocalLockFileAssemblies>
</PropertyGroup>
Add the TauriDotNetBridge
and Microsoft.Extensions.DependencyInjection
NuGet packages:
<ItemGroup>
<PackageReference Include="Microsoft.Extensions.DependencyInjection" Version="8.0.1" />
<PackageReference Include="TauriDotNetBridge" Version="2.2.0" />
</ItemGroup>
Create a plugin to register your controllers:
public class PlugIn : IPlugIn
{
public void Initialize(IServiceCollection services)
{
services.AddSingleton<HomeController>();
}
}
Add a sample controller like this:
using TauriDotNetBridge.Contracts;
public class LogInInfo
{
public string? User { get; set; }
public string? Password { get; set; }
}
public class HomeController
{
public string Login(LogInInfo loginInfo)
{
return RouteResponse.Ok($"User '{loginInfo.User}' logged in successfully");
}
}
Build the .NET project to verify the changes and ensure the C# DLLs are copied to the Tauri target folder.
In src-tauri/Cargo.toml
, add:
[dependencies]
tauri-dotnet-bridge-host = "0.8.0"
And then configure Tauri in your main.rs
or lib.rs
as follows:
use tauri_dotnet_bridge_host;
#[tauri::command]
fn dotnet_request(request: &str) -> String {
tauri_dotnet_bridge_host::process_request(request)
}
fn main() {
tauri::Builder::default()
.invoke_handler(tauri::generate_handler![dotnet_request])
.run(tauri::generate_context!())
.expect("error while running tauri application");
}
Run cargo build in src-tauri
to verify the changes.
To call call your DotNet controllers in TypeScript, you can use the following code snippet:
import { invoke } from '@tauri-apps/api/core'
export type PluginRequest = {
controller: string
action: string
data?: object
}
export type RouteResponse<T> = {
errorMessage?: string
data?: T
}
export class TauriApi {
public static async invokePlugin<T>(request: PluginRequest): Promise<T | null> {
let response = (await invoke('dotnet_request', { request: JSON.stringify(request) })) as string
let jsonResponse = JSON.parse(response) as RouteResponse<T>
if (jsonResponse.errorMessage) throw new Error(jsonResponse.errorMessage)
return jsonResponse.data ?? (null as T | null)
}
}
And then use use it like this:
async function login(user: string): Promise<string | null> {
let userData = { user: user, pass: '<secret>' }
return await TauriApi.invokePlugin<string>({ controller: 'home', action: 'login', data: userData })
}
In plain JavaScript you can call a controller like this:
async function login() {
const response = await invoke('dotnet_request', {
request: JSON.stringify({ controller: 'home', action: 'login', data: { user: name.value, password: '<secret>' } })
})
greetMsg.value = JSON.parse(response).data
}
Finally, include the DotNet backend in the build process by changing the `beforeDevCommand
and beforeBuildCommand
in src-tauri\tauri.conf.json
like this
{
"build": {
"beforeDevCommand": "dotnet build src-dotnet/src-dotnet.sln && pnpm dev",
"beforeBuildCommand": "dotnet build -c Release src-dotnet/src-dotnet.sln && pnpm build",
}
}
and then run the application
pnpm run tauri dev
and enjoy coding a tauri-app with DotNet backend 😊
Simply build the tauri package
pnpm run tauri build
To redistribute the package you can now copy the generated rust executable and the "dotnet" folder.
To publish events from C# to the frontend, first register the tauri dotnet bridge event support like this
tauri::Builder::default()
.plugin(tauri_plugin_shell::init())
.invoke_handler(tauri::generate_handler![dotnet_request])
.setup(|app| {
let app_handle = app.handle().clone();
tauri_dotnet_bridge_host::register_emit(move |event_name, payload| {
app_handle
.emit(event_name, payload)
.expect(&format!("Failed to emit event {}", event_name));
});
Ok(())
})
.run(tauri::generate_context!())
.expect("error while running tauri application");
Then in C# import IEventPublisher
into any controller
using TauriDotNetBridge.Contracts;
public class HomeController(IEventPublisher publisher)
{
public void SomeCommand()
{
publisher.Publish("event-name", $"any payload");
}
}
Use IHostedService
to implement an active service which can publish events any time
using TauriDotNetBridge.Contracts;
public class NewsFeed(IEventPublisher publisher) : IHostedService
{
public async Task StartAsync(CancellationToken cancellationToken)
{
Console.WriteLine($"News feed started");
using var timer = new PeriodicTimer(TimeSpan.FromSeconds(15));
while (await timer.WaitForNextTickAsync(cancellationToken))
{
Console.WriteLine($"{DateTime.Now}|Publishing news");
publisher.Publish("news-feed", $"News from C# at {DateTime.Now}");
}
}
}
Make sure you register it using IHostedService
interface
public class PlugIn : IPlugIn
{
public void Initialize(IServiceCollection services)
{
services.AddSingleton<IHostedService, NewsFeed>();
}
}
A sample project can be found here: https://github.com/plainionist/TauriDotNetBridge/tree/main/src/tauri-dotnet-sample
Video tutorial:
Inspired by: https://github.com/RubenPX/TauriNET