electron/docs/development/build-system-overview.md

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# Build System Overview
Electron uses [gyp](https://gyp.gsrc.io/) for project generation and
[ninja](https://ninja-build.org/) for building. Project configurations can
be found in the `.gyp` and `.gypi` files.
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## Gyp Files
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Following `gyp` files contain the main rules for building Electron:
* `electron.gyp` defines how Electron itself is built.
* `common.gypi` adjusts the build configurations of Node to make it build
together with Chromium.
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* `vendor/brightray/brightray.gyp` defines how `brightray` is built and
includes the default configurations for linking with Chromium.
* `vendor/brightray/brightray.gypi` includes general build configurations about
building.
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## Component Build
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Since Chromium is quite a large project, the final linking stage can take
quite a few minutes, which makes it hard for development. In order to solve
this, Chromium introduced the "component build", which builds each component as
a separate shared library, making linking very quick but sacrificing file size
and performance.
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In Electron we took a very similar approach: for `Debug` builds, the binary
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will be linked to a shared library version of Chromium's components to achieve
fast linking time; for `Release` builds, the binary will be linked to the static
library versions, so we can have the best possible binary size and performance.
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## Minimal Bootstrapping
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All of Chromium's prebuilt binaries (`libchromiumcontent`) are downloaded when
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running the bootstrap script. By default both static libraries and shared
libraries will be downloaded and the final size should be between 800MB and 2GB
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depending on the platform.
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By default, `libchromiumcontent` is downloaded from Amazon Web Services.
If the `LIBCHROMIUMCONTENT_MIRROR` environment variable is set, the bootstrap
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script will download from it.
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[`libchromiumcontent-qiniu-mirror`](https://github.com/hokein/libchromiumcontent-qiniu-mirror)
is a mirror for `libchromiumcontent`. If you have trouble in accessing AWS, you
can switch the download address to it via
`export LIBCHROMIUMCONTENT_MIRROR=http://7xk3d2.dl1.z0.glb.clouddn.com/`
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If you only want to build Electron quickly for testing or development, you
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can download just the shared library versions by passing the `--dev` parameter:
```bash
$ ./script/bootstrap.py --dev
$ ./script/build.py -c D
```
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## Two-Phase Project Generation
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Electron links with different sets of libraries in `Release` and `Debug`
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builds. `gyp`, however, doesn't support configuring different link settings for
different configurations.
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To work around this Electron uses a `gyp` variable
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`libchromiumcontent_component` to control which link settings to use and only
generates one target when running `gyp`.
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## Target Names
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Unlike most projects that use `Release` and `Debug` as target names, Electron
uses `R` and `D` instead. This is because `gyp` randomly crashes if there is
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only one `Release` or `Debug` build configuration defined, and Electron only has
to generate one target at a time as stated above.
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This only affects developers, if you are just building Electron for rebranding
you are not affected.
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## Tests
Test your changes conform to the project coding style using:
```bash
$ npm run lint
```
Test functionality using:
```bash
$ npm test
```
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Whenever you make changes to Electron source code, you'll need to re-run the
build before the tests:
```bash
$ npm run build && npm test
```
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You can make the test suite run faster by isolating the specific test or block
you're currently working on using Mocha's
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[exclusive tests](https://mochajs.org/#exclusive-tests) feature. Just append
`.only` to any `describe` or `it` function call:
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```js
describe.only('some feature', function () {
// ... only tests in this block will be run
})
```
Alternatively, you can use mocha's `grep` option to only run tests matching the
given regular expression pattern:
```sh
$ npm test -- --grep child_process
```
Tests that include native modules (e.g. `runas`) can't be executed with the
debug build (see [#2558](https://github.com/electron/electron/issues/2558) for
details), but they will work with the release build.
To run the tests with the release build use:
```bash
$ npm test -- -R
```