The native Node modules are supported by Electron, but since Electron is very likely to use a different V8 version from the Node binary installed in your system, you have to manually specify the location of Electron's headers when building native modules.
Three ways to install native modules:
By setting a few environment variables, you can use npm
to install modules
directly.
An example of installing all dependencies for Electron:
# Electron's version.
export npm_config_target=1.2.3
# The architecture of Electron, can be ia32 or x64.
export npm_config_arch=x64
export npm_config_target_arch=x64
# Download headers for Electron.
export npm_config_disturl=https://atom.io/download/electron
# Tell node-pre-gyp that we are building for Electron.
export npm_config_runtime=electron
# Tell node-pre-gyp to build module from source code.
export npm_config_build_from_source=true
# Install all dependencies, and store cache to ~/.electron-gyp.
HOME=~/.electron-gyp npm install
You can also choose to install modules like other Node projects, and then
rebuild the modules for Electron with the electron-rebuild
package. This module can get the version of Electron and handle the manual steps
of downloading headers and building native modules for your app.
An example of installing electron-rebuild
and then rebuild modules with it:
npm install --save-dev electron-rebuild
# Every time you run "npm install", run this:
./node_modules/.bin/electron-rebuild
# On Windows if you have trouble, try:
.\node_modules\.bin\electron-rebuild.cmd
If you are a developer developing a native module and want to test it against
Electron, you might want to rebuild the module for Electron manually. You can
use node-gyp
directly to build for Electron:
cd /path-to-module/
HOME=~/.electron-gyp node-gyp rebuild --target=1.2.3 --arch=x64 --dist-url=https://atom.io/download/electron
The HOME=~/.electron-gyp
changes where to find development headers. The
--target=1.2.3
is version of Electron. The --dist-url=...
specifies
where to download the headers. The --arch=x64
says the module is built for
64bit system.
To compile native Node addons against a custom build of Electron that doesn't
match a public release, instruct npm
to use the version of Node you have bundled
with your custom build.
npm rebuild --nodedir=$HOME/.../path/to/electron/vendor/node
If you installed a native module and found it was not working, you need to check following things:
- The architecture of the module has to match Electron's architecture (ia32 or x64).
- After you upgrade Electron, you usually need to rebuild the modules.
- When in doubt, run
electron-rebuild
first.
prebuild
provides a way to
publish native Node modules with prebuilt binaries for multiple versions of Node
and Electron.
If modules provide binaries for the usage in Electron, make sure to omit
--build-from-source
and the npm_config_build_from_source
environment
variable in order to take full advantage of the prebuilt binaries.
The node-pre-gyp
tool provides a way to deploy native Node
modules with prebuilt binaries, and many popular modules are using it.
Usually those modules work fine under Electron, but sometimes when Electron uses a newer version of V8 than Node, and there are ABI changes, bad things may happen. So in general it is recommended to always build native modules from source code.
If you are following the npm
way of installing modules, then this is done
by default, if not, you have to pass --build-from-source
to npm
, or set the
npm_config_build_from_source
environment variable.