README.md
Application entrypoint:
nexe my-app.js
stdin interface
rollup -c | nexe --resource "./public/**/*" -o my-app.exe
For more CLI options see: nexe --help
nexe server.js -r "public/**/*.html"nexe --buildnexe -t x86-8.0.0Additional files or resources can be added to the binary by passing -r "glob/pattern/**/*". These included files can be read in the application by using fs.readFile or fs.readFileSync.
By default nexe will attempt to download a pre-built executable. These are listed on the releases page. The exact version you want may be unavailable or you may want to customize what is built. See nexe --help for a list of options available when passing the --build option. You will also need to ensure your environment is setup to build node. Note: the python binary in your path should be an acceptable version of python 3; you can create a symlink or use the --python parameter (e.g. nexe --build --python=$(which python3)).
The fastest and most reliable way to get started is simply to run the commands below. If you'd rather read the details or perform a manual install of the prerequisites, you can find that here.
The instructions below are the fastest and most reliable method. Run the following sets of commands with PowerShell (running as Administrator).
Install all required build tools (and dependencies):
Set-ExecutionPolicy Unrestricted -Force
iex ((New-Object System.Net.WebClient).DownloadString('https://boxstarter.org/bootstrapper.ps1'))
get-boxstarter -Force
Install-BoxstarterPackage https://raw.githubusercontent.com/nodejs/node/master/tools/bootstrap/windows_boxstarter -DisableReboots
Set config:
npm config set msvs_version 2019
npm config set python python3.8
Where 2019 is the version of Visual Studio you have (if you have it).
Notes:
14.5.4 and 15.8.0nexe will still work, considering the set config area abovenpm install windows-build-tools unless you're having some type of issue, because the above commands configures and installs the latest/preferred too.const { compile } = require('nexe')
compile({
input: './my-app.js',
build: true, //required to use patches
patches: [
async (compiler, next) => {
await compiler.setFileContentsAsync(
'lib/new-native-module.js',
'module.exports = 42'
)
return next()
}
]
}).then(() => {
console.log('success')
})
options: objectinput: stringoutput: stringname with an OS specific extension.target: string | object'windows-ia32-10.13.0'
each segment is optional, and will be merged with the current environment
Examples: (full list)
'win32-x86-10.13.0{ platform: 'alpine' }darwin-10.13.0linux-x64macos-10.13.0build flag is set, the platform portion of the target is ignored.processbundle: string | booleanexport function createBundle (options: NexeOptions): Promise<string>
name: stringnexe_${Date.now()}cwd: stringmangle: booleanbuild: boolean--cleanremote: stringnullasset: stringpython: stringpython can be accessednullflags: string[]['--expose-gc'][]configure: string[]['--with-dtrace', '--dest-cpu=x64'][]make: string[][]vcBuild: string[]['nosign', 'release']snapshot: stringnullresources: string[]['./public/**/*'][]temp: stringNEXE_TEMP~/.nexeico: string--build to be set.rc: object {
CompanyName: "ACME Corp",
PRODUCTVERSION: "17,3,0,0",
FILEVERSION: "1,2,3,4"
...
}
{}clean: booleanenableNodeCli: boolean--without-node-options configure flag.falsefakeArgv: booleanprocess.argv[1]). If nexe was used with stdin this will be '[stdin]'.ghToken: stringprocess.env.GITHUB_TOKENsourceUrl: stringloglevel: string'info'patches: NexePatch[][]plugins: NexePatch[][]NexePatch: (compiler: NexeCompiler, next: () => Promise<void>) => Promise<void>Patches and Plugins are just a middleware functions that take two arguments, the compiler, and next. The compiler is described below, and next ensures that the pipeline continues. Its invocation should always be awaited or returned to ensure correct behavior. Patches also require that --build be set, while plugins do not.
For examples, see the built in patches: src/patches.
NexeCompilersetFileContentsAsync(filename: string, contents: string): Promise<void>
replaceInFileAsync(filename: string, ...replaceArgs): Promise<void>
String.prototype.replacereadFileAsync(filename: string): Promise<NexeFile>
addResource(filename: string, contents: Buffer): Promise<void>
files: NexeFile[]
NexeFilecontents: stringabsPath: stringfilename: stringAny modifications made to NexeFile#contents will be maintained in the cache without the need to explicitly write them back out, e.g. using NexeCompiler#setFileContentsAsync.
In order to use native modules, the native binaries must be shipped alongside the binary generated by nexe.
Error: Entry file "" not found! means you need to provide nexe with input. Either use -i or pipe data to it.
Error: https://github.com/nexe/nexe/releases/download/v3.3.3/windows-x64-15.8.0 is not available, create it using the --build flag or similar message means that it either:
nexe knows what version of the executable to use.
nexe -i "app.js" -r "public/**/*.html" -o "dist/myApp.exe" -t x64-14.15.3-i specifies the input, -r specifies resources to embed, -o specifies the output, -t specifies the target.Building
$ git clone [email protected]:nexe/nexe.git
$ cd nexe
$ npm i && npm run build
Testing
$ npm test