#### Description of Change The first sentence within the documentation "[Important: signing your code](https://www.electronjs.org/docs/latest/tutorial/tutorial-packaging#important-signing-your-code)" is grammatically incorrect. > In order to distribute desktop applications to end users, we highly recommended for you to code sign your Electron app. I've adjusted the copy to switch "highly recommended" to "highly recommend". I've also switched out "for you to code sign" for "that you code sign" for clarity. > In order to distribute desktop applications to end users, we _highly recommend_ that you **code sign** your Electron app.
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title | description | slug | hide_title |
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Packaging Your Application | To distribute your app with Electron, you need to package it and create installers. | tutorial-packaging | false |
import Tabs from '@theme/Tabs'; import TabItem from '@theme/TabItem';
:::info Follow along the tutorial
This is part 5 of the Electron tutorial.
- Prerequisites
- Building your First App
- Using Preload Scripts
- Adding Features
- Packaging Your Application
- Publishing and Updating
:::
Learning goals
In this part of the tutorial, we'll be going over the basics of packaging and distributing your app with Electron Forge.
Using Electron Forge
Electron does not have any tooling for packaging and distribution bundled into its core
modules. Once you have a working Electron app in dev mode, you need to use
additional tooling to create a packaged app you can distribute to your users (also known
as a distributable). Distributables can be either installers (e.g. MSI on Windows) or
portable executable files (e.g. .app
on macOS).
Electron Forge is an all-in-one tool that handles the packaging and distribution of Electron
apps. Under the hood, it combines a lot of existing Electron tools (e.g. electron-packager
,
@electron/osx-sign
, electron-winstaller
, etc.) into a single interface so you do not
have to worry about wiring them all together.
Importing your project into Forge
You can install Electron Forge's CLI in your project's devDependencies
and import your
existing project with a handy conversion script.
npm install --save-dev @electron-forge/cli
npx electron-forge import
Once the conversion script is done, Forge should have added a few scripts
to your package.json
file.
//...
"scripts": {
"start": "electron-forge start",
"package": "electron-forge package",
"make": "electron-forge make"
},
//...
:::info CLI documentation
For more information on make
and other Forge APIs, check out
the Electron Forge CLI documentation.
:::
You should also notice that your package.json now has a few more packages installed
under devDependencies
, and a new forge.config.js
file that exports a configuration
object. You should see multiple makers (packages that generate distributable app bundles) in the
pre-populated configuration, one for each target platform.
Creating a distributable
To create a distributable, use your project's new make
script, which runs the
electron-forge make
command.
npm run make
This make
command contains two steps:
- It will first run
electron-forge package
under the hood, which bundles your app code together with the Electron binary. The packaged code is generated into a folder. - It will then use this packaged app folder to create a separate distributable for each configured maker.
After the script runs, you should see an out
folder containing both the distributable
and a folder containing the packaged application code.
out/
├── out/make/zip/darwin/x64/my-electron-app-darwin-x64-1.0.0.zip
├── ...
└── out/my-electron-app-darwin-x64/my-electron-app.app/Contents/MacOS/my-electron-app
The distributable in the out/make
folder should be ready to launch! You have now
created your first bundled Electron application.
:::tip Distributable formats
Electron Forge can be configured to create distributables in different OS-specific formats (e.g. DMG, deb, MSI, etc.). See Forge's Makers documentation for all configuration options.
:::
:::tip Creating and adding application icons
Setting custom application icons requires a few additions to your config. Check out Forge's icon tutorial for more information.
:::
:::info Packaging without Electron Forge
If you want to manually package your code, or if you're just interested understanding the mechanics behind packaging an Electron app, check out the full Application Packaging documentation.
:::
Important: signing your code
In order to distribute desktop applications to end users, we highly recommend that you code sign your Electron app. Code signing is an important part of shipping desktop applications, and is mandatory for the auto-update step in the final part of the tutorial.
Code signing is a security technology that you use to certify that a desktop app was created by a known source. Windows and macOS have their own OS-specific code signing systems that will make it difficult for users to download or launch unsigned applications.
On macOS, code signing is done at the app packaging level. On Windows, distributable installers are signed instead. If you already have code signing certificates for Windows and macOS, you can set your credentials in your Forge configuration.
:::info
For more information on code signing, check out the Signing macOS Apps guide in the Forge docs.
:::
module.exports = {
packagerConfig: {
osxSign: {},
//...
osxNotarize: {
tool: 'notarytool',
appleId: process.env.APPLE_ID,
appleIdPassword: process.env.APPLE_PASSWORD,
teamId: process.env.APPLE_TEAM_ID,
}
//...
}
}
module.exports = {
//...
makers: [
{
name: '@electron-forge/maker-squirrel',
config: {
certificateFile: './cert.pfx',
certificatePassword: process.env.CERTIFICATE_PASSWORD,
},
},
],
//...
}
Summary
Electron applications need to be packaged to be distributed to users. In this tutorial, you imported your app into Electron Forge and configured it to package your app and generate installers.
In order for your application to be trusted by the user's system, you need to digitally certify that the distributable is authentic and untampered by code signing it. Your app can be signed through Forge once you configure it to use your code signing certificate information.