Minor tweak, should make the sentence a bit more fluent. Thanks!
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Application packaging
To protect your app's resources and source code from the users, you can choose to package your app into an asar archive with little changes to your source code.
Generating asar
archive
An asar archive is a simple tar-like format that concatenates files into a single file, atom-shell can read arbitrary files from it without unpacking the whole file.
Following is the steps to package your app into an asar
archive:
1. Install the asar utility
$ npm install -g asar
2. Package with asar pack
$ asar pack your-app app.asar
Using asar
archives
In atom-shell there are two sets of APIs: Node APIs provided by Node.js, and Web
APIs provided by Chromium. Both APIs support reading files from asar
archives.
Node API
With special patches in atom-shell, Node APIs like fs.readFile
and require
treat asar
archives as virtual directories, and the files in it as normal
files in the filesystem.
For example, suppose we have an example.asar
archive under /path/to
:
$ asar list /path/to/example.asar
/app.js
/file.txt
/dir/module.js
/static/index.html
/static/main.css
/static/jquery.min.js
Read a file in the asar
archive:
var fs = require('fs');
fs.readFileSync('/path/to/example.asar/file.txt');
List all files under the root of the archive:
var fs = require('fs');
fs.readdirSync('/path/to/example.asar');
Use a module from the archive:
require('/path/to/example.asar/dir/module.js');
Web API
In a web page, files in archive can be requested with the file:
protocol. Like
the Node API, asar
archives are treated as directories.
For example, to get a file with $.get
:
<script>
var $ = require('./jquery.min.js');
$.get('file:///path/to/example.asar/file.txt', function(data) {
console.log(data);
});
</script>
You can also display a web page in an asar
archive with BrowserWindow
:
var BrowserWindow = require('browser-window');
var win = new BrowserWindow({width: 800, height: 600});
win.loadUrl('file:///path/to/example.asar/static/index.html');
Treating asar
archive as normal file
For some cases like verifying the asar
archive's checksum, we need to read the
content of asar
archive as file. For this purpose you can use the built-in
original-fs
module which provides original fs
APIs without asar
support:
var originalFs = require('original-fs');
originalFs.readFileSync('/path/to/example.asar');
Limitations on Node API
Even though we tried hard to make asar
archives in the Node API work like
directories as much as possible, there are still limitations due to the
low-level nature of the Node API.
Archives are read only
The archives can not be modified so all Node APIs that can modify files will not
work with asar
archives.
Working directory can not be set to directories in archive
Though asar
archives are treated as directories, there are no actual
directories in the filesystem, so you can never set the working directory to
directories in asar
archives, passing them to cwd
option of some APIs will
also cause errors.
Extra unpacking on some APIs
Most fs
APIs can read file or get file's information from asar
archives
without unpacking, but for some APIs that rely on passing the real file path to
underlying system calls, atom-shell will extract the needed file into a
temporary file and pass the path of the temporary file to the APIs to make them
work. This adds a little overhead for those APIs.
APIs that requires extra unpacking are:
child_process.execFile
child_process.fork
fs.open
fs.openSync
process.dlopen
- Used byrequire
on native modules
Fake stat information of fs.stat
The Stats
object returned by fs.stat
and its friends on files in asar
archives is generated by guessing, because those files do not exist on the
filesystem. So you should not trust the Stats
object except for getting file
size and checking file type.