Charles Kerr 65ee977a86 Exit gracefully on linux (#12139)
* Fix timing issue in singleton fixture.

Singleton now sends the "we've started" message out only after it's
received a `'ready'` event from `app`. Previously it sent the message
out immediately, resulting in the parent test trying to manipulate it
before Singleton's event loop was fully bootstrapped.

* Check for graceful exits on Linux, too.

Rewrite the "exits gracefully on macos" spec to run on Linux too.

* Check for graceful exits everywhere.

* Tweak comment

* Better error logging in api-app-spec.js. (#12122)

In the 'exits gracefully' test for app.exit(exitCode),
print the relevant error information if the test fails.

* Run the exit-gracefully test on macOS and Linux.

Windows does not support sending signals, but Node.js offers some
emulation with process.kill(), and subprocess.kill(). Sending signal 0
can be used to test for the existence of a process. Sending SIGINT,
SIGTERM, and SIGKILL cause the unconditional termination of the target
process.

So, we'll need a different approach if we want to test this in win32.
2018-03-06 22:01:17 -05:00
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2018-03-06 22:01:17 -05:00
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2018-02-23 10:21:24 +09:00
2017-09-15 00:58:31 +02:00
2017-08-22 10:02:51 +09:00
2017-11-21 17:15:14 -08:00
2018-02-23 10:22:00 +09:00
2017-12-05 15:01:01 -05:00
2018-03-05 16:24:48 +01:00
2017-12-04 13:19:51 -05:00
2018-01-01 00:51:40 +01:00
2018-01-28 16:54:58 -08:00

Electron Logo

CircleCI Build Status AppVeyor Build Status Jenkins Build Status devDependency Status Join the Electron Community on Slack

📝 Available Translations: 🇨🇳 🇹🇼 🇧🇷 🇪🇸 🇰🇷 🇯🇵 🇷🇺 🇫🇷 🇹🇭 🇳🇱 🇹🇷 🇮🇩 🇺🇦 🇨🇿 🇮🇹. View these docs in other languages at electron/i18n.

The Electron framework lets you write cross-platform desktop applications using JavaScript, HTML and CSS. It is based on Node.js and Chromium and is used by the Atom editor and many other apps.

Follow @ElectronJS on Twitter for important announcements.

This project adheres to the Contributor Covenant code of conduct. By participating, you are expected to uphold this code. Please report unacceptable behavior to electron@github.com.

Installation

To install prebuilt Electron binaries, use npm. The preferred method is to install Electron as a development dependency in your app:

npm install electron --save-dev --save-exact

The --save-exact flag is recommended as Electron does not follow semantic versioning. For info on how to manage Electron versions in your apps, see Electron versioning.

For more installation options and troubleshooting tips, see installation.

Quick start

Clone and run the electron/electron-quick-start repository to see a minimal Electron app in action:

git clone https://github.com/electron/electron-quick-start
cd electron-quick-start
npm install
npm start

Resources for learning Electron

Programmatic usage

Most people use Electron from the command line, but if you require electron inside your Node app (not your Electron app) it will return the file path to the binary. Use this to spawn Electron from Node scripts:

const electron = require('electron')
const proc = require('child_process')

// will print something similar to /Users/maf/.../Electron
console.log(electron)

// spawn Electron
const child = proc.spawn(electron)

Mirrors

Documentation Translations

Find documentation translations in electron/i18n.

Community

You can ask questions and interact with the community in the following locations:

Check out awesome-electron for a community maintained list of useful example apps, tools and resources.

License

MIT

When using the Electron or other GitHub logos, be sure to follow the GitHub logo guidelines.

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