# Installation To install prebuilt Electron binaries, use [`npm`][npm]. The preferred method is to install Electron as a development dependency in your app: ```sh npm install electron --save-dev ``` See the [Electron versioning doc][versioning] for info on how to manage Electron versions in your apps. ## Running Electron ad-hoc If you're in a pinch and would prefer to not use `npm install` in your local project, you can also run Electron ad-hoc using the [`npx`][npx] command runner bundled with `npm`: ```sh npx electron . ``` The above command will run the current working directory with Electron. Note that any dependencies in your app will not be installed. ## Customization If you want to change the architecture that is downloaded (e.g., `ia32` on an `x64` machine), you can use the `--arch` flag with npm install or set the `npm_config_arch` environment variable: ```shell npm install --arch=ia32 electron ``` In addition to changing the architecture, you can also specify the platform (e.g., `win32`, `linux`, etc.) using the `--platform` flag: ```shell npm install --platform=win32 electron ``` ## Proxies If you need to use an HTTP proxy, you need to set the `ELECTRON_GET_USE_PROXY` variable to any value, plus additional environment variables depending on your host system's Node version: * [Node 10 and above][proxy-env-10] * [Before Node 10][proxy-env] ## Custom Mirrors and Caches During installation, the `electron` module will call out to [`@electron/get`][electron-get] to download prebuilt binaries of Electron for your platform. It will do so by contacting GitHub's release download page (`https://github.com/electron/electron/releases/tag/v$VERSION`, where `$VERSION` is the exact version of Electron). If you are unable to access GitHub or you need to provide a custom build, you can do so by either providing a mirror or an existing cache directory. #### Mirror You can use environment variables to override the base URL, the path at which to look for Electron binaries, and the binary filename. The URL used by `@electron/get` is composed as follows: ```javascript url = ELECTRON_MIRROR + ELECTRON_CUSTOM_DIR + '/' + ELECTRON_CUSTOM_FILENAME ``` For instance, to use the China CDN mirror: ```shell ELECTRON_MIRROR="https://cdn.npm.taobao.org/dist/electron/" ``` By default, `ELECTRON_CUSTOM_DIR` is set to `v$VERSION`. To change the format, use the `{{ version }}` placeholder. For example, `version-{{ version }}` resolves to `version-5.0.0`, `{{ version }}` resolves to `5.0.0`, and `v{{ version }}` is equivalent to the default. As a more concrete example, to use the China non-CDN mirror: ```shell ELECTRON_MIRROR="https://npm.taobao.org/mirrors/electron/" ELECTRON_CUSTOM_DIR="{{ version }}" ``` The above configuration will download from URLs such as `https://npm.taobao.org/mirrors/electron/8.0.0/electron-v8.0.0-linux-x64.zip`. #### Cache Alternatively, you can override the local cache. `@electron/get` will cache downloaded binaries in a local directory to not stress your network. You can use that cache folder to provide custom builds of Electron or to avoid making contact with the network at all. * Linux: `$XDG_CACHE_HOME` or `~/.cache/electron/` * macOS: `~/Library/Caches/electron/` * Windows: `$LOCALAPPDATA/electron/Cache` or `~/AppData/Local/electron/Cache/` On environments that have been using older versions of Electron, you might find the cache also in `~/.electron`. You can also override the local cache location by providing a `electron_config_cache` environment variable. The cache contains the version's official zip file as well as a checksum, stored as a text file. A typical cache might look like this: ```sh ├── httpsgithub.comelectronelectronreleasesdownloadv1.7.9electron-v1.7.9-darwin-x64.zip │ └── electron-v1.7.9-darwin-x64.zip ├── httpsgithub.comelectronelectronreleasesdownloadv1.7.9SHASUMS256.txt │ └── SHASUMS256.txt ├── httpsgithub.comelectronelectronreleasesdownloadv1.8.1electron-v1.8.1-darwin-x64.zip │ └── electron-v1.8.1-darwin-x64.zip ├── httpsgithub.comelectronelectronreleasesdownloadv1.8.1SHASUMS256.txt │ └── SHASUMS256.txt ├── httpsgithub.comelectronelectronreleasesdownloadv1.8.2-beta.1electron-v1.8.2-beta.1-darwin-x64.zip │ └── electron-v1.8.2-beta.1-darwin-x64.zip ├── httpsgithub.comelectronelectronreleasesdownloadv1.8.2-beta.1SHASUMS256.txt │ └── SHASUMS256.txt ├── httpsgithub.comelectronelectronreleasesdownloadv1.8.2-beta.2electron-v1.8.2-beta.2-darwin-x64.zip │ └── electron-v1.8.2-beta.2-darwin-x64.zip ├── httpsgithub.comelectronelectronreleasesdownloadv1.8.2-beta.2SHASUMS256.txt │ └── SHASUMS256.txt ├── httpsgithub.comelectronelectronreleasesdownloadv1.8.2-beta.3electron-v1.8.2-beta.3-darwin-x64.zip │ └── electron-v1.8.2-beta.3-darwin-x64.zip └── httpsgithub.comelectronelectronreleasesdownloadv1.8.2-beta.3SHASUMS256.txt └── SHASUMS256.txt ``` ## Skip binary download When installing the `electron` NPM package, it automatically downloads the electron binary. This can sometimes be unnecessary, e.g. in a CI environment, when testing another component. To prevent the binary from being downloaded when you install all npm dependencies you can set the environment variable `ELECTRON_SKIP_BINARY_DOWNLOAD`. E.g.: ```sh ELECTRON_SKIP_BINARY_DOWNLOAD=1 npm install ``` ## Troubleshooting When running `npm install electron`, some users occasionally encounter installation errors. In almost all cases, these errors are the result of network problems and not actual issues with the `electron` npm package. Errors like `ELIFECYCLE`, `EAI_AGAIN`, `ECONNRESET`, and `ETIMEDOUT` are all indications of such network problems. The best resolution is to try switching networks, or wait a bit and try installing again. You can also attempt to download Electron directly from [electron/electron/releases][releases] if installing via `npm` is failing. If installation fails with an `EACCESS` error you may need to [fix your npm permissions][npm-permissions]. If the above error persists, the [unsafe-perm][unsafe-perm] flag may need to be set to true: ```sh sudo npm install electron --unsafe-perm=true ``` On slower networks, it may be advisable to use the `--verbose` flag in order to show download progress: ```sh npm install --verbose electron ``` If you need to force a re-download of the asset and the SHASUM file set the `force_no_cache` environment variable to `true`. [npm]: https://docs.npmjs.com [versioning]: ./electron-versioning.md [npx]: https://docs.npmjs.com/cli/v7/commands/npx [releases]: https://github.com/electron/electron/releases [proxy-env-10]: https://github.com/gajus/global-agent/blob/v2.1.5/README.md#environment-variables [proxy-env]: https://github.com/np-maintain/global-tunnel/blob/v2.7.1/README.md#auto-config [electron-get]: https://github.com/electron/get [npm-permissions]: https://docs.npmjs.com/getting-started/fixing-npm-permissions [unsafe-perm]: https://docs.npmjs.com/misc/config#unsafe-perm