ember-web-app
This Ember addon helps you configure and manage the web app manifest and related meta tags needed to create a Progressive Web Application
From MDN
The web app manifest provides information about an application (such as name,
author, icon, and description) in a text file. The purpose of the manifest is
to install web applications to the homescreen of a device, providing users
with quicker access and a richer experience.
Addon features:
- Generates a manifest.ember-web-app.json file using a JavaScript template
- Uses fingerprint for images
- Generates equivalent meta tags for supporting other devices (e.g. iPhone)
- Validates the configuration
Here's a brief list of the main missing features that we intend to add in the future.
- Generate image variants for different devices
- Generate Microsoft's browserconfig.xml manifest for Win8/Win10 integration
See the documentation section below for more information.
Table of content
Installation
$ ember install ember-web-app
This generates a config/manifest.js configuration file.
Example
Having the following configuration file config/manifest.js
module.exports = function() {
return {
name: "Let's Cook",
short_name: "Let's Cook",
description: "An app for organizing your weekly menu and groceries list.",
start_url: "/",
display: "standalone",
background_color: "#ffa105",
theme_color: "#ffa105",
icons: [
{
src: "/images/icons/android-chrome-192x192.png",
sizes: "192x192",
type: "image/png"
},
{
src: "/images/icons/android-chrome-512x512.png",
sizes: "512x512",
type: "image/png"
},
{
src: "/images/icons/apple-touch-icon.png",
sizes: "180x180",
type: "image/png",
targets: ['apple']
}
],
apple: {
statusBarStyle: 'black-translucent'
}
}
}
It will generate the following meta tags
index.html
<link rel="manifest" href="/manifest.json">
<link rel="apple-touch-icon" href="/images/icons/android-chrome-192x192-883114367f2d72fc9a509409454a1e73.png" sizes="192x192">
<link rel="apple-touch-icon" href="/images/icons/android-chrome-512x512-af3d768ff652dc2be589a3c22c6dc827.png" sizes="512x512">
<link rel="apple-touch-icon" href="/images/icons/apple-touch-icon-36cba25bc155e8ba414265f9d85861ca.png" sizes="180x180">
<meta name="theme-color" content="#ffa105">
<meta name="apple-mobile-web-app-capable" content="yes">
<meta name="apple-mobile-web-app-title" content="Let's Cook">
<meta name="apple-mobile-web-app-status-bar-style" content="black-translucent">
and the following manifest.json
file
{
"name": "Let's Cook",
"short_name": "Let's Cook",
"description": "An app for organizing your weekly menu and groceries list.",
"start_url": "/",
"display": "standalone",
"background_color": "#ffa105",
"theme_color": "#ffa105",
"icons": [
{
"src": "/images/icons/android-chrome-192x192-883114367f2d72fc9a509409454a1e73.png",
"sizes": "192x192",
"type":"image/png"
},
{
"src": "/images/icons/android-chrome-512x512-af3d768ff652dc2be589a3c22c6dc827.png",
"sizes": "512x512",
"type": "image/png"
}
]
}
Configuration
Manifest name
You can set the name of the manifest by adding a configuation option to config/environment.js
.
module.exports = function(environment) {
var ENV = {
modulePrefix: 'dummy',
environment: environment,
rootURL: '/'
...
};
ENV['ember-web-app'] = {
name: 'my-awesome-manifest.json'
};
return ENV;
};
Disable
You can disable the addon by adding a configuration option to ember-cli-build.js
build file.
var EmberApp = require('ember-cli/lib/broccoli/ember-app');
module.exports = function(defaults) {
var options = {
'ember-web-app': {
enabled: false
}
};
var app = new EmberApp(defaults, options);
return app.toTree();
};
API documentation
This Ember addon generates a Web Application Manifest at build time using the config/manifest.js
configuration file.
It also generates some compatibility meta tags for supporting vendor specific web application features like Apple's Web Content For Safari and Microsoft's Browser configuration schema that don't yet support the Web Application Manifest standard.
Internally, this addon takes into account four different types of targets for generating the web app manifest taking care of including some backward compatibility meta tags in order to support as many devices and browsers as possible. These targets are:
- manifest (default target)
- apple (to target iOS devices)
- ms (to target Win8/Win10 devices)
- android (to target options specific for android devices)
Not all targets are used for all properties (actually, most properties are not affected by the targets).
List of supported properties.
name
Provides a human-readable name for the application as it is intended to be displayed to the user, for example among a list of other applications or as a label for an icon.
Example
manifest.name = "dummy";
Target | Generates |
---|
manifest | { "name": "dummy" } |
apple | <meta name="apple-mobile-web-app-title" content="dummy"> |
ms | <meta name="application-name" content="dummy"> |
android | does not apply |
short_name
Provides a short human-readable name for the application. This is intended for use where there is insufficient space to display the full name of the web application.
Example
manifest.short_name = "dummy";
Target | Generates |
---|
manifest | { "short_name": "dummy" } |
apple | does not apply |
ms | does not apply |
android | does not apply |
background_color
Defines the expected background color for the web application.
Example
manifest.background_color = "#fff";
Target | Generates |
---|
manifest | { "background_color": "#fff" } |
apple | does not apply |
ms | does not apply |
android | does not apply |
description
Provides a general description of what the web application does.
Example
manifest.description = "Lorem ipsum dolor";
Target | Generates |
---|
manifest | { "description": "Lorem ipsum dolor" } |
apple | does not apply |
ms | does not apply |
android | does not apply |
dir
Specifies the primary text direction for the name
, short_name
, and description members.
Possible values:
- ltr (left-to-right)
- rtl (right-to-left)
- auto
Example
manifest.dir = "ltr";
Target | Generates |
---|
manifest | { "dir": "ltr" } |
apple | does not apply |
ms | does not apply |
android | does not apply |
display
Defines the developer's preferred display mode for the web application.
Possible values:
- fullscreen
- standalone
- minimal-ui
- browser
Example
manifest.display = "fullscreen";
Target | Generates |
---|
manifest | { "display": "fullscreen" } |
apple | does not apply |
ms | does not apply |
android | does not apply |
icons
Specifies an array of image objects that can serve as application icons in various contexts. For example, they can be used to represent the web application amongst a list of other applications, or to integrate the web application with an OS's task switcher and/or system preferences.
Image object members:
src
The path to the image file.sizes
A string containing space-separated image dimensions.type
A hint as to the media type of the image.targets
Non standard Targets for the images. ['manifest', 'apple'] by default.
Example
icons: [
{
src: '/foo/bar.png',
sizes: '180x180'
},
{
src: '/bar/baz.png',
sizes: '280x280',
targets: ['apple']
}
];
Target | Generates |
---|
manifest | { "icons": [ { "src": "/foo/bar.png", "sizes": "180x180" } ] } |
apple | <link rel="apple-touch-icon" href="/foo/bar.png" sizes="180x180"> <link rel="apple-touch-icon" href="/foo/bar.png" sizes="280x280"> |
ms | does not apply (for now) |
android | does not apply |
lang
Specifies the primary language for the values in the name and short_name members.
Example
manifest.lang = "es-UY";
Target | Generates |
---|
manifest | { "lang": "en-UY" } |
apple | does not apply |
ms | does not apply |
android | does not apply |
orientation
Defines the default orientation for all the web application's top level browsing contexts.
Possible values:
- any
- natural
- landscape
- landscape-primary
- landscape-secondary
- portrait
- portrait-primary
- portrait-secondary
Example
manifest.orientation = "portrait";
Target | Generates |
---|
manifest | { "orientation": "portrait" } |
apple | does not apply |
ms | does not apply |
android | does not apply |
prefer_related_applications
Specifies a boolean value that hints for the user agent to indicate to the user that the specified related applications are available, and recommended over the web application.
Possible values:
Example
manifest.prefer_related_applications = true;
Target | Generates |
---|
manifest | { "prefer_related_applications": true } |
apple | does not apply |
ms | does not apply |
android | does not apply |
related_applications
Specifies an array of "application objects" representing native applications that are installable by, or accessible to, the underlying platform.
Application object members:
platform
The platform on which the application can be found.url
The URL at which the application can be found.id
The ID used to represent the application on the specified platform.
Example
manifest.prefer_related_applications = true;
manifest.related_applications = [
{
"platform": "itunes",
"url": "https://itunes.apple.com/app/example-app1/id123456789"
}
];
Target | Generates |
---|
manifest | { "prefer_related_applications": true, "related_applications": [{"platform": "itunes", "url": "https://itunes.apple.com/app/example-app1/id123456789" }] } |
apple | does not apply |
ms | does not apply |
android | does not apply |
scope
Defines the navigation scope of this web application's application context. This basically restricts what web pages can be viewed while the manifest is applied.
Example
manifest.scope = "/myapp/";
Target | Generates |
---|
manifest | { "scope": "/myapp/" } |
apple | does not apply |
ms | does not apply |
android | does not apply |
start_url
Specifies the URL that loads when a user launches the application from a device.
Example
manifest.start_url = "./?utm_source=web_app_manifest";
Target | Generates |
---|
manifest | { "start_url": "./?utm_source=web_app_manifest" } |
apple | does not apply |
ms | does not apply |
android | does not apply |
theme_color
Defines the default theme color for an application. This sometimes affects how the application is displayed by the OS.
Example
manifest.theme_color = "aliceblue";
Target | Generates |
---|
manifest | { "theme_color": "aliceblue" } |
apple | does not apply |
ms | does not apply |
android | <meta name="theme-color" content="aliceblue"> |
Vendor specific properties (non-standard)
apple.statusBarStyle
Sets the style of the status bar for a web application in iOS
See Changing the Status Bar Appearance
Possible values:
default
The status bar appears normal.black
The status bar has a black background.black-translucent
The status bar is black and translucent.
Note that if set to default or black, the web content is displayed below the status bar. If set to black-translucent, the web content is displayed on the entire screen, partially obscured by the status bar.
Example
manifest.apple = {
statusBarStyle: 'black-translucent'
};
Target | Generates |
---|
manifest | does not apply |
apple | <meta name="apple-mobile-web-app-status-bar-style" content="black-translucent"> |
ms | does not apply |
android | does not apply |
apple.precomposed
Adds precomposed
suffix to apple touch icons
See Precomposed Keyword for apple touch icons
Possible values:
true
Adds precomposed suffix.false
(default) Does not add precomposed suffix.
Example
manifest.apple = {
precomposed: 'true'
};
Target | Generates |
---|
manifest | does not apply |
apple | <link rel="apple-touch-icon-precomposed" href="/images/icons/apple-touch-icon-192x192.png" sizes="192x192"> |
ms | does not apply |
android | does not apply |
Development
$ git clone https://github.com/san650/ember-web-app.git
$ cd $_
$ yarn
$ bower install
Running tests
$ npm test
Project's health
License
ember-web-app is licensed under the MIT license.
See LICENSE for the full license text.