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web-ifc documentation
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platform documentation
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demo
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community
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npm package
Web IFC
web-ifc is a javascript library to read and write ifc files, at native speeds. web-ifc is part of the That Open Company project, which aims to lower the threshold for developing open BIM applications.
Install
npm install web-ifc
Quick setup
const WebIFC = require("web-ifc/web-ifc-api.js");
const ifcApi = new WebIFC.IfcAPI();
await ifcApi.Init();
let modelID = ifcApi.OpenModel(, , );
ifcApi.CloseModel(modelID);
See examples for more details on how to use web-ifc.
Current Build
The current live build of web-ifc is available here. Using this allows you to test newest fixes before we make a release. If you wish to use this version then download the zip file and place the contents of the dist folder manually into your node_modules/web-ifc folder. I.e if you are using web-ifc-three then it will be node_modules/web-ifc-three/node_modules/web-ifc. Please note you must replace the javascript and the WASM.
Requirements
These are the requirements needed to build web-ifc (only for those that wish to build their own version).
- Node v16 or later
- NPM v7 or later
- EMSCRIPTEN v3.1.44 or later
- CMAKE v3.18 or later
Regression Testing
We have a library of test models in the tests/public folder. If you have a model you would like to contribute please open a PR.
You can run regression tests on all these models by running npm run regression
. It will alert you if any of the sample model geometry has changed. If the change is correct you can refresh the regression tests by running npm run regression-update
.
Building WASM module
Setting up emscripten and build system
The WASM library is built through emscripten, please see the emscripten installation guide for information on how to set up emscripten. Afterwards emsdk_env
needs to be in your path.
To build the WASM you also need CMAKE see here and (on windows) MINGW see here - once installed (and in your path) run npm run setup-mingw
to configure the environment for web-ifc.
WASM library
Run npm install
to install all dependencies.
Run npm run setup-env
whenever you open a new terminal, this will set up the required emscripten environment variables for you to compile code.
Run npm run build-release
to build a release version of the wasm binary and the accompanying web-ifc api. It will be placed in ./dist
.
If you wish to build the WASM with debugging enabled you can run npm run build-debug
. This will enable you to inspect debugging information better when running web-ifc.
Run npm run dev
to launch a development server with a basic ifc file viewer.
Build Files
The output of the build process consts of the following files:
- web-ifc.wasm - The wasm (compiled C++) to run in the browser
- web-ifc-mt.wasm - The wasm (compiled C++) to run in the browser if multi-threading is supported.
- web-ifc-node.wasm - The wasm (compiled C++) to run in node
- web-ifc-api-node.js - Compiled javascript wrapper for the wasm to run in node.
- web-ifc-api-node.d.ts - Typescript definitions for the web-ifc api (for node)
- web-ifc-api.js - Compiled javascript wrapper for the wasm to run in browser.
- web-ifc-api.d.ts - Typescript definitions for the main web-ifc API
- ifc-schema.d.ts - Typescript definitions for the IFC schema
- helpers/properties.d.ts - Typescript definitions for the properties aspect of the web-ifc API
- helpers/log.d.ts - Typescript definitions for the logger aspect of the web-ifc API
- web-ifc-mt.worker.js - Webworker javascript to enable multi-threading in the browser.
Stand alone C++
Although the primary focus of the library is to be used through WebAssembly in the browser/nodejs, the project can be used stand-alone as a c++ library or executable. See here for a simple entry point to get started.