This change shaves ~20 MB off the download size by only copying over the
wavesrv binary that is relevant for whichever architecture we're
currently packaging. This is only relevant for macOS at the moment,
though it can also apply to Windows when we get multi-arch builds
working.
This required renaming our Go binaries from .amd64 to .x64 to comply
with electron-builder's naming conventions.
This adds a new job to the Build Helper pipeline for building for
Windows. This includes code signing via DigiCert. Right now, we can only
build for x64 on Windows as wavesrv fails to build for arm64 in the
default runner and the Windows ARM runner images are missing a bunch of
tooling.
This also adds new separated arm64 and x64 for macOS for those who don't
want to use the universal binary.
This also improves the general code quality of the Taskfile.yml and the
build-helper.yml files.
Adds support for building for Linux ARM targets using the new GitHub
Linux ARM64 runners. Adds a new menu item to toggle the visibility of
the menu bar on non-darwin targets,
Adds a new set of configurations for managing whether the app will
automatically check for updates. Ports over the auto update code from
the old app. In this version, the main difference is that updates can be
manually checked for using a menu bar item, even if auto updates are
disabled.
Adds electron-builder, which we will use to package and distribute our
application, same as in the existing app.
Replaces explicit port assignments with dynamic ones, which are then
stored into environment variables.
Adds a ~/.w2-dev folder for use when running a dev build.
The build-helper pipeline from the old repo is included here too, but it
is not updated yet so it will fail.
Also removes some redundant utility functions and cleans up some let vs.
const usage.
The packaging can be run using the `package:prod` and `package:dev`
tasks.
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Co-authored-by: sawka <mike.sawka@gmail.com>
lots of changes. new wshrpc implementation. unify websocket, web,
blockcontroller, domain sockets, and terminal inputs to all use the new
rpc system.
lots of moving files around to deal with circular dependencies
use new wshrpc as a client in wsh cmd
This adds support for windows builds. With it, the app can successfully
run on windows and unix systems. Note that the terminal still only works
on unix systems at this time.
This sets us back up to use Vite via the electron-vite package. This
will let us continue to build our testing suite on Vitest and take
advantage of Vite features like Hot Module Reloading, etc.
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Co-authored-by: sawka <mike.sawka@gmail.com>