so no point making it take longer than it has to for the devs only testing
webapp
build:electron - hook npm run install:electron
install:electron - run npm i for the electron deps
electron - start the app locally for testing
add to README
Signed-off-by: Michael Telatynski <7t3chguy@gmail.com>
Improve dependency management for Electron main process deps
Dependencies in /electron/package.json will be installed through a script in /package.json and will be bundled via electron-builder
Does not affect standard webapp whatsoever
Signed-off-by: Michael Telatynski <7t3chguy@gmail.com>
- rename test:multi npm target to test-multi, for consistency with react-sdk
- base karma webpack config on the distribution one
- include Olm if we have it
- don't use the karma source loader - it's pointless given we webpack
everything.
- turn off module listing in the webpack stats to shorten the console output
Otherwise Chrome thinks you're working on a new file every time
you refresh and therefore closes source tabs and removes
breakpoints which is very annoying. It also allegedly makes
webpack-dev-server run out of memory because it has to remember
all the different files.
Use postcss-webpack-loader instead of webpack-cli to process the scss. Doing so
mostly means that we avoid the problem that webpack-dev-server fails to start
if we haven't already built the CSS. (It also simplifies package.json somewhat,
which is no bad thing)
* Revert 79d164309f
as it seems to break shortcuts altogether
* Update electron-builder (and add the squirrel windows package
that the newer version now requires: it's been split out). This
uses a newer version of squirrel which has some fixes for
shortcuts.
I'm unsure exactly what was going wrong originally in
https://github.com/vector-im/riot-web/issues/2775 but #79d1643
seems to break shortcut creation as far as I can see.
All of those cpx invocations were getting unwieldy, and I suspect the exotic
quoting needed to run them under parallelshell was breaking things on windows.
Replace the unwieldy cpx invocations with an unwieldy custom script.