2014-09-29 13:34:54 +00:00
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# Application packaging
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2014-09-29 15:05:02 +00:00
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To protect your app's resources and source code from the users, you can choose
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to package your app into an [asar][asar] archive with little changes to your
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source code.
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## Generating `asar` archive
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An [asar][asar] archive is a simple tar-like format that concatenates files
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into a single file, atom-shell can read arbitrary files from it without unpacking
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the whole file.
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2014-10-14 01:16:22 +00:00
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Following is the steps to package your app into an `asar` archive:
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2014-10-14 01:16:22 +00:00
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### 1. Install the asar utility
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```bash
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$ npm install -g asar
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```
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### 2. Package with `asar pack`
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```bash
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$ asar pack your-app app.asar
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```
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## Using `asar` archives
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In atom-shell there are two sets of APIs: Node APIs provided by Node.js, and Web
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APIs provided by Chromium. Both APIs support reading files from `asar` archives.
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### Node API
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With special patches in atom-shell, Node APIs like `fs.readFile` and `require`
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treat `asar` archives as virtual directories, and the files in it as normal
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files in the filesystem.
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For example, suppose we have an `example.asar` archive under `/path/to`:
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```bash
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$ asar list /path/to/example.asar
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/app.js
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/file.txt
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/dir/module.js
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/static/index.html
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/static/main.css
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/static/jquery.min.js
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```
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Read a file in the `asar` archive:
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```javascript
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var fs = require('fs');
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fs.readFileSync('/path/to/example.asar/file.txt');
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```
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List all files under the root of the archive:
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```javascript
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var fs = require('fs');
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fs.readdirSync('/path/to/example.asar');
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```
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Use a module from the archive:
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```javascript
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require('/path/to/example.asar/dir/module.js');
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```
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2015-03-04 12:16:22 +00:00
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You can also display a web page in an `asar` archive with `BrowserWindow`:
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```javascript
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var BrowserWindow = require('browser-window');
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var win = new BrowserWindow({width: 800, height: 600});
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win.loadUrl('file:///path/to/example.asar/static/index.html');
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```
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### Web API
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2015-02-01 02:48:11 +00:00
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In a web page, files in archive can be requested with the `file:` protocol. Like
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the Node API, `asar` archives are treated as directories.
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For example, to get a file with `$.get`:
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```html
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<script>
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var $ = require('./jquery.min.js');
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$.get('file:///path/to/example.asar/file.txt', function(data) {
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console.log(data);
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});
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</script>
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```
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2014-11-12 03:58:03 +00:00
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### Treating `asar` archive as normal file
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For some cases like verifying the `asar` archive's checksum, we need to read the
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content of `asar` archive as file. For this purpose you can use the built-in
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`original-fs` module which provides original `fs` APIs without `asar` support:
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```javascript
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var originalFs = require('original-fs');
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originalFs.readFileSync('/path/to/example.asar');
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```
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2014-09-29 15:05:02 +00:00
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## Limitations on Node API
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2014-10-14 01:16:22 +00:00
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Even though we tried hard to make `asar` archives in the Node API work like
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directories as much as possible, there are still limitations due to the
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low-level nature of the Node API.
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### Archives are read only
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The archives can not be modified so all Node APIs that can modify files will not
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work with `asar` archives.
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### Working directory can not be set to directories in archive
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Though `asar` archives are treated as directories, there are no actual
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directories in the filesystem, so you can never set the working directory to
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directories in `asar` archives, passing them to `cwd` option of some APIs will
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also cause errors.
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### Extra unpacking on some APIs
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Most `fs` APIs can read file or get file's information from `asar` archives
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without unpacking, but for some APIs that rely on passing the real file path to
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underlying system calls, atom-shell will extract the needed file into a
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temporary file and pass the path of the temporary file to the APIs to make them
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work. This adds a little overhead for those APIs.
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APIs that requires extra unpacking are:
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* `child_process.execFile`
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* `fs.open`
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* `fs.openSync`
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* `process.dlopen` - Used by `require` on native modules
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### Fake stat information of `fs.stat`
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The `Stats` object returned by `fs.stat` and its friends on files in `asar`
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archives is generated by guessing, because those files do not exist on the
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filesystem. So you should not trust the `Stats` object except for getting file
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size and checking file type.
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2015-03-21 11:11:15 +00:00
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## Adding unpacked files in `asar` archive
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As stated above, some Node APIs will unpack the file to filesystem when
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calling, apart from the performance issues, it could also lead to false alerts
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of virus scanners.
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To work around this, you can unpack some files creating archives by using the
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`--unpack` option, an example of excluding shared libraries of native modules
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is:
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```bash
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$ asar pack app app.asar --unpack *.node
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```
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After running the command, apart from the `app.asar`, there is also an
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`app.asar.unpacked` folder generated which contains the unpacked files, you
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should copy it together with `app.asar` when shipping it to users.
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2015-03-20 13:32:10 +00:00
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2014-09-29 15:05:02 +00:00
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[asar]: https://github.com/atom/asar
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