420e834a31
Co-authored-by: trop[bot] <37223003+trop[bot]@users.noreply.github.com> Co-authored-by: Erick Zhao <erick@hotmail.ca>
212 lines
6.4 KiB
Markdown
212 lines
6.4 KiB
Markdown
---
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title: Deep Links
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description: Set your Electron app as the default handler for a specific protocol.
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slug: launch-app-from-url-in-another-app
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hide_title: true
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---
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# Deep Links
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## Overview
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<!-- ✍ Update this section if you want to provide more details -->
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This guide will take you through the process of setting your Electron app as the default
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handler for a specific [protocol](../api/protocol.md).
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By the end of this tutorial, we will have set our app to intercept and handle
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any clicked URLs that start with a specific protocol. In this guide, the protocol
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we will use will be "`electron-fiddle://`".
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## Examples
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### Main Process (main.js)
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First, we will import the required modules from `electron`. These modules help
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control our application lifecycle and create a native browser window.
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```js
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const { app, BrowserWindow, shell } = require('electron')
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const path = require('node:path')
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```
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Next, we will proceed to register our application to handle all "`electron-fiddle://`" protocols.
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```js
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if (process.defaultApp) {
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if (process.argv.length >= 2) {
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app.setAsDefaultProtocolClient('electron-fiddle', process.execPath, [path.resolve(process.argv[1])])
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}
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} else {
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app.setAsDefaultProtocolClient('electron-fiddle')
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}
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```
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We will now define the function in charge of creating our browser window and load our application's `index.html` file.
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```js
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let mainWindow
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const createWindow = () => {
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// Create the browser window.
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mainWindow = new BrowserWindow({
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width: 800,
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height: 600,
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webPreferences: {
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preload: path.join(__dirname, 'preload.js')
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}
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})
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mainWindow.loadFile('index.html')
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}
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```
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In this next step, we will create our `BrowserWindow` and tell our application how to handle an event in which an external protocol is clicked.
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This code will be different in Windows and Linux compared to MacOS. This is due to both platforms emitting the `second-instance` event rather than the `open-url` event and Windows requiring additional code in order to open the contents of the protocol link within the same Electron instance. Read more about this [here](../api/app.md#apprequestsingleinstancelockadditionaldata).
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#### Windows and Linux code:
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```js @ts-type={mainWindow:Electron.BrowserWindow} @ts-type={createWindow:()=>void}
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const gotTheLock = app.requestSingleInstanceLock()
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if (!gotTheLock) {
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app.quit()
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} else {
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app.on('second-instance', (event, commandLine, workingDirectory) => {
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// Someone tried to run a second instance, we should focus our window.
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if (mainWindow) {
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if (mainWindow.isMinimized()) mainWindow.restore()
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mainWindow.focus()
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}
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// the commandLine is array of strings in which last element is deep link url
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dialog.showErrorBox('Welcome Back', `You arrived from: ${commandLine.pop()}`)
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})
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// Create mainWindow, load the rest of the app, etc...
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app.whenReady().then(() => {
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createWindow()
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})
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}
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```
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#### MacOS code:
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```js @ts-type={createWindow:()=>void}
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// This method will be called when Electron has finished
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// initialization and is ready to create browser windows.
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// Some APIs can only be used after this event occurs.
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app.whenReady().then(() => {
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createWindow()
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})
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// Handle the protocol. In this case, we choose to show an Error Box.
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app.on('open-url', (event, url) => {
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dialog.showErrorBox('Welcome Back', `You arrived from: ${url}`)
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})
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```
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Finally, we will add some additional code to handle when someone closes our application.
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```js
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// Quit when all windows are closed, except on macOS. There, it's common
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// for applications and their menu bar to stay active until the user quits
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// explicitly with Cmd + Q.
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app.on('window-all-closed', () => {
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if (process.platform !== 'darwin') app.quit()
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})
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```
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## Important notes
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### Packaging
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On macOS and Linux, this feature will only work when your app is packaged. It will not work when
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you're launching it in development from the command-line. When you package your app you'll need to
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make sure the macOS `Info.plist` and the Linux `.desktop` files for the app are updated to include
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the new protocol handler. Some of the Electron tools for bundling and distributing apps handle
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this for you.
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#### [Electron Forge](https://electronforge.io)
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If you're using Electron Forge, adjust `packagerConfig` for macOS support, and the configuration for
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the appropriate Linux makers for Linux support, in your [Forge configuration](https://www.electronforge.io/configuration)
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_(please note the following example only shows the bare minimum needed to add the configuration changes)_:
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```json
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{
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"config": {
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"forge": {
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"packagerConfig": {
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"protocols": [
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{
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"name": "Electron Fiddle",
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"schemes": ["electron-fiddle"]
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}
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]
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},
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"makers": [
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{
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"name": "@electron-forge/maker-deb",
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"config": {
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"mimeType": ["x-scheme-handler/electron-fiddle"]
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}
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}
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]
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}
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}
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}
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```
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#### [Electron Packager](https://github.com/electron/packager)
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For macOS support:
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If you're using Electron Packager's API, adding support for protocol handlers is similar to how
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Electron Forge is handled, except
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`protocols` is part of the Packager options passed to the `packager` function.
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```js @ts-nocheck
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const packager = require('@electron/packager')
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packager({
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// ...other options...
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protocols: [
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{
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name: 'Electron Fiddle',
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schemes: ['electron-fiddle']
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}
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]
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}).then(paths => console.log(`SUCCESS: Created ${paths.join(', ')}`))
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.catch(err => console.error(`ERROR: ${err.message}`))
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```
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If you're using Electron Packager's CLI, use the `--protocol` and `--protocol-name` flags. For
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example:
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```shell
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npx electron-packager . --protocol=electron-fiddle --protocol-name="Electron Fiddle"
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```
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## Conclusion
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After you start your Electron app, you can enter in a URL in your browser that contains the custom
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protocol, for example `"electron-fiddle://open"` and observe that the application will respond and
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show an error dialog box.
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<!--
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Because Electron examples usually require multiple files (HTML, CSS, JS
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for the main and renderer process, etc.), we use this custom code block
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for Fiddle (https://www.electronjs.org/fiddle).
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Please modify any of the files in the referenced folder to fit your
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example.
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The content in this codeblock will not be rendered in the website so you
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can leave it empty.
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-->
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```fiddle docs/fiddles/system/protocol-handler/launch-app-from-URL-in-another-app
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```
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<!-- ✍ Explanation of the code below -->
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