Martijn Walraven 1407143e9f Make CordovaProject#run use the new execFileAsync with waitForClose false
This fixes an issue where starting up the Android Emulator with stdio
piped would only exit when the emulator exits, instead of when the app
is successfully installed, thus blocking further startup.

The reason for this was that cordova-lib superspawn listens for the
‘close’ event of its child process, which is emitted when the stdio
streams have all terminated. If those streams are shared with other
processes (such as further child processes spawned by the child
process), that means we won't receive a 'close' until all processes
have exited, so we should listen for 'exit' instead.
2015-08-26 19:26:54 +02:00
2015-08-19 17:29:02 -04:00
2015-03-17 12:06:10 -07:00
2015-01-07 14:42:53 -05:00
2015-08-07 12:44:46 -07:00
2015-07-31 10:56:11 -07:00
2015-02-03 13:17:31 -08:00
2015-08-26 19:26:47 +02:00
2015-07-31 18:38:25 -07:00
2015-08-14 10:56:17 -07:00

Meteor

Meteor is an ultra-simple environment for building modern web applications.

With Meteor you write apps:

  • in pure JavaScript
  • that send data over the wire, rather than HTML
  • using your choice of popular open-source libraries

Documentation is available at http://docs.meteor.com/.

Try the getting started tutorial.

Quick Start

Install Meteor:

curl https://install.meteor.com | /bin/sh

Create a project:

meteor create try-meteor

Run it:

cd try-meteor
meteor

Deploy it to the world, for free:

meteor deploy try-meteor.meteor.com

Slow Start (for developers)

If you want to run on the bleeding edge, or help develop Meteor, you can run Meteor directly from a git checkout.

git clone git://github.com/meteor/meteor.git
cd meteor

If you're the sort of person who likes to build everything from scratch, you can build all the Meteor dependencies (node.js, npm, mongodb, etc) with the provided script. This requires git, a C and C++ compiler, autotools, and scons. If you do not run this script, Meteor will automatically download pre-compiled binaries when you first run it.

# OPTIONAL
./scripts/generate-dev-bundle.sh

Now you can run meteor directly from the checkout (if you did not build the dependency bundle above, this will take a few moments to download a pre-build version).

./meteor --help

From your checkout, you can read the docs locally. The /docs directory is a meteor application, so simply change into the /docs directory and launch the app:

cd docs/
../meteor

You'll then be able to read the docs locally in your browser at http://localhost:3000/.

Note that if you run Meteor from a git checkout, you cannot pin apps to specific Meteor releases or run using different Meteor releases using --release.

Uninstalling Meteor

Aside from a short launcher shell script, Meteor installs itself inside your home directory. To uninstall Meteor, run:

rm -rf ~/.meteor/
sudo rm /usr/local/bin/meteor

Developer Resources

Building an application with Meteor?

Interested in contributing to Meteor?

We are hiring! Visit https://www.meteor.com/jobs to learn more about working full-time on the Meteor project.

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