# OpenBCI_Hub **Repository Path**: zlata/OpenBCI_Hub ## Basic Information - **Project Name**: OpenBCI_Hub - **Description**: No description available - **Primary Language**: Unknown - **License**: MIT - **Default Branch**: master - **Homepage**: None - **GVP Project**: No ## Statistics - **Stars**: 1 - **Forks**: 0 - **Created**: 2020-04-15 - **Last Updated**: 2021-09-15 ## Categories & Tags **Categories**: Uncategorized **Tags**: None ## README OpenBCI Hub Application ============== A minimalistic yet comprehensive boilerplate application for [Electron runtime](http://electron.atom.io). Tested on OSX, Windows and Linux. This project does not impose on you any framework (like Angular or React). Instead, it tries to give you only the 'electron' part of technology stack so you can pick your favorite tools for the rest. # Quick start The only development dependency of this project is [Node.js](https://nodejs.org). So just make sure you have it installed. Then type few commands known to every Node developer... ``` git clone https://github.com/OpenBCI/OpenBCI_Hub.git cd OpenBCI_Hub npm install npm install electron-prebuilt -g npm start ``` ... and boom! You have a running desktop application on your screen. **On Windows:** open a PowerShell and run: ``` npm install --global --production windows-build-tools ``` If you have any issues, try: ``` npm install --build-from-source ``` # Structure of the project ## Declaring dependencies There are **two** `package.json` files: #### 1. `package.json` for development Sits on path: `electron-boilerplate/package.json`. This is where you should declare dependencies for your development environment and build scripts. **This file is not distributed with real application!** It's also the place to specify the Electron runtime version you want to use: ```json "devDependencies": { "electron": "1.8.4" } ``` Note: [Electron authors advise](http://electron.atom.io/docs/tutorial/electron-versioning/) to use fixed version here. #### 2. `package.json` for your application Sits on path: `electron-boilerplate/app/package.json`. This is **real** manifest of your application. Declare your app dependencies here. #### OMG, but seriously why there are two `package.json`? 1. Native npm modules (those written in C, not JavaScript) need to be compiled, and here we have two different compilation targets for them. Those used in application need to be compiled against electron runtime, and all `devDependencies` need to be compiled against your locally installed node.js. Thanks to having two files this is trivial. 2. When you package the app for distribution there is no need to add up to size of the app with your `devDependencies`. Here those are always not included (reside outside the `app` directory). ## Folders for application code The application is split between two main folders... `src` - this folder is intended for files which need to be transpiled or compiled (files which can't be used directly by electron). `app` - contains all static assets (put here images, css, html etc.) which don't need any pre-processing. The build process compiles all stuff from the `src` folder and puts it into the `app` folder, so after the build has finished, your `app` folder contains the full, runnable application. Treat `src` and `app` folders like two halves of one bigger thing. The drawback of this design is that `app` folder contains some files which should be git-ignored and some which shouldn't (see `.gitignore` file). But thanks to this two-folders split development builds are much (much!) faster. # Development ### Installation ``` npm install ``` It will also download Electron runtime and install dependencies for the second `package.json` file inside the `app` folder. ### Starting the app ``` npm start ``` ### Adding npm modules to your app Remember to add your dependencies to `app/package.json` file: ``` cd app npm install name_of_npm_module --save ``` ### Working with modules Thanks to [rollup](https://github.com/rollup/rollup) you can (and should) use ES6 modules for all code in `src` folder. But because ES6 modules still aren't natively supported you can't use them in the `app` folder. Use ES6 syntax in the `src` folder like this: ```js import myStuff from './my_lib/my_stuff'; ``` But use CommonJS syntax in `app` folder. So the code from above should look as follows: ```js var myStuff = require('./my_lib/my_stuff'); ``` # Testing ### Unit tests Using [electron-mocha](https://github.com/jprichardson/electron-mocha) test runner with the [chai](http://chaijs.com/api/assert/) assertion library. To run the tests go with standard and use the npm test script: ``` npm test ``` This task searches for all files in `src` directory which respect pattern `*.spec.js`. ### End to end tests Using [mocha](https://mochajs.org/) test runner and [spectron](http://electron.atom.io/spectron/). Run with command: ``` npm run e2e ``` This task searches for all files in `e2e` directory which respect pattern `*.e2e.js`. ### Code coverage Using [istanbul](http://gotwarlost.github.io/istanbul/) code coverage tool. Run with command: ``` npm run coverage ``` You can set the reporter(s) by setting `ISTANBUL_REPORTERS` environment variable (defaults to `text-summary` and `html`). The report directory can be set with `ISTANBUL_REPORT_DIR` (defaults to `coverage`). ### Continuous integration Electron [can be plugged](https://github.com/atom/electron/blob/master/docs/tutorial/testing-on-headless-ci.md) into CI systems. Here two CIs are preconfigured for you. [Travis CI](https://travis-ci.org/) covers testing on OSX and Linux and [App Veyor](https://www.appveyor.com) on Windows. # Making a release To package your app into an installer use command: ``` npm run release ``` It will start the packaging process for operating system you are running this command on. Ready for distribution file will be outputted to `dist` directory. You can create Windows installer only when running on Windows, the same is true for Linux and OSX. So to generate all three installers you need all three operating systems. All packaging actions are handled by [electron-builder](https://github.com/electron-userland/electron-builder). See docs of this tool if you want to customize something. **Note:** There are various icons and bitmap files in `resources` directory. Those are used in installers and intended to be replaced by your own graphics. **Note:** After OpenBCI NPM package update (ex. [@openbci/cyton](https://www.npmjs.com/package/@openbci/cyton)), use `npm run clean-install` and then `npm run release`. # License Released under the MIT license.