A complete tool for building modern Electron applications.
Electron Forge unifies the existing (and well maintained) build tools for Electron development into a simple, easy to use package so that anyone can jump right in to Electron development.
🏗️
The main
branch is a rewrite of Electron Forge that will eventually be the 6.x series. If you
are looking for the 5.x series (the version currently published to NPM under electron-forge
), please view the 5.x branch.
Website | Goals | Docs and Usage | Configuration | Support | Contributing | Changelog
Note: Electron Forge requires Node 12.13.0 (LTS) or above, plus git installed.
If you have a more recent version of npm
or yarn
, you can use
npx
,
or
yarn create
.
npx create-electron-app my-new-app
# or
yarn create electron-app my-new-app
# then
cd my-new-app
npm start
Alternatively (less recommended):
npm install -g @electron-forge/cli
electron-forge init my-new-app
cd my-new-app
npm start
- Starting with Electron should be as simple as a single command.
- Developers shouldn't have to worry about setting up build tooling, native module rebuilding, etc. Everything should "just work" for them out of the box.
- Everything from creating the project to packaging the project for release should be handled by one core dependency in a standard way while still offering users maximum choice and freedom.
With these goals in mind, under the hood this project uses, among others:
electron-rebuild
: Automatically recompiles native Node.js modules against the correct Electron version.- Electron Packager: Customizes and bundles your Electron app to get it ready for distribution.
For Electron Forge documentation and usage you should check out our website: electronforge.io
By default, Electron Forge only runs vanilla (i.e., non-compiled) JavaScript, but for webpack and other build tooling support check out the plugins section of our docs site. We currently have plugins for Webpack and Electron Compile, and a template for Webpack.
Samuel Attard | Mark Lee |