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electron-workers

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electron-workers

Run electron scripts in managed workers

  • 1.2.0
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electron-workers

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Run electron scripts in managed workers

This module let you run an electron script with scalability in mind, useful if you have to rely on electron to do heavy or long running tasks in parallel (web scrapping, take screenshots, generate PDF, etc)

First create an electron script wrapped in a webserver

script.js

var http = require('http'),
    app = require('app');

// every worker gets unique port, get it from a process environment variables
var port = process.env.ELECTRON_WORKER_PORT,
    host = process.env.ELECTRON_WORKER_HOST,
    workerId = process.env.ELECTRON_WORKER_ID; // worker id useful for logging

console.log('Hello from worker', workerId);

app.on('ready', function() {
  // you can use any webserver library/framework you like (connect, express, hapi, etc)
  var server = http.createServer(function(req, res) {
    res.writeHead(200, {'Content-Type': 'application/json'});
    // data passed to `electronWorkers.execute` will be available in req body
    req.pipe(res);
  });

  server.listen(port, host);
});

Start electron workers

var electronWorkers = require('electron-workers')({
  pathToScript: 'script.js',
  timeout: 5000,
  numberOfWorkers: 5
});

electronWorkers.start(function(startErr) {
  if (startErr) {
    return console.error(startErr);
  }

  // `electronWorkers` will send your data in a POST request to your electron script
  electronWorkers.execute({ someData: 'someData' }, function(err, data) {
    if (err) {
      return console.error(err);
    }

    console.log(JSON.stringify(data)); // { someData: 'someData' } 
  });
});

Options

pathToScript (required) - path to the electron script
pathToElectron - path to the electron executable, by default we will try to find the path using the value returned from electron-prebuilt or the value in your $PATH
debug Number - pass debug port to electron process, see electron's debugging guide
debugBrk Number - pass debug-brk port to electron process, see electron's debugging guide
electronArgs Array - pass custom arguments to the electron executable. ej: electronArgs: ['--some-value=2', '--enable-some-behaviour']
timeout - execution timeout in ms
numberOfWorkers - number of electron instances, by default it will be the number of cores in the machine
host - ip or hostname where to start listening phantomjs web service, default 127.0.0.1
portLeftBoundary - don't specify if you just want to take any random free port
portRightBoundary - don't specify if you just want to take any random free port
hostEnvVarName - customize the name of the environment variable passed to the electron script that specifies the worker host. defaults to ELECTRON_WORKER_HOST
portEnvVarName - customize the name of the environment variable passed to the electron script that specifies the worker port. defaults to ELECTRON_WORKER_PORT

Troubleshooting

If you are using node with nvm and you have installed electron with npm install -g electron-prebuilt you probably will see an error or log with env: node: No such file or directory, this is because the electron executable installed by electron-prebuilt is a node CLI spawning the real electron executable internally, since nvm don't install/symlink node to /usr/bin/env/node when the electron executable installed by electron-prebuilt tries to run, it will fail because node won't be found in that context..

Solution:

1.- Install electron-prebuilt as a dependency in your app, this is the option recommended because you probably want to ensure your app always run with the exact version you tested it, and probably you dotn't want to install electron globally in your system.

2.- You can make a symlink to /usr/bin/env/node but this is not recommended by nvm authors, because you will loose all the power that nvm brings.

3.- Put the path to the real electron executable in your $PATH.

License

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Package last updated on 22 Nov 2015

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