nestjs-electron-ipc-transport

`nestjs-electron-ipc-transport` is a custom micro-service transport for `NestJS`, and let you integrate `NestJS` into your `electron` main process in a more reasonable way.

Usage no npm install needed!

<script type="module">
  import nestjsElectronIpcTransport from 'https://cdn.skypack.dev/nestjs-electron-ipc-transport';
</script>

README

nestjs-electron-ipc-transport

Description

nestjs-electron-ipc-transport is a custom micro-service transport for NestJS, and let you integrate NestJS into your electron main process in a more reasonable way.

Keep in mind that NestJS is a framework designed for back-end, so this integration solution is design for code in main process. In traditional B/S architecture, user's browsers running front-end application, servers running back-end application, and communicate using HTTP protocol with each other. In electron's scenario, renderer process is the front-end, main process is the back-end, and IPC is the communication protocol.

How to use this package properly?

Basically, this package act as a custom micro-service transport for NestJS, and add event listeners automatically, when messages send from renderer process, the respective method in controller will be called. To send messages safely, you should use contextBridge offered by electron and enable contextIsolation.

Install

yarn add nestjs-electron-ipc-transport

or

npm install nestjs-electron-ipc-transport

Usage

see full example here

Bootstrap your nestjs app

import { NestFactory } from '@nestjs/core';
import { app as electronApp, BrowserWindow } from 'electron';
import { MicroserviceOptions } from '@nestjs/microservices';
import { ElectronIPCTransport } from 'nestjs-electron-ipc-transport';
import { resolve } from 'path';
import { AppModule } from './app.module';

async function bootstrap() {
  const app = await NestFactory.createMicroservice<MicroserviceOptions>(
    AppModule,
    {
      strategy: new ElectronIPCTransport(),
    },
  );

  app.listen(() => console.log('app started'));
  electronApp.whenReady()
    .then(async () => {
      const win = new BrowserWindow({
        webPreferences: {
          contextIsolation: true,
          preload: resolve(__dirname, './bridge/index.js'),
        },
      });
      await win.loadFile('../../dist/renderer/index.html');
    });
}

bootstrap();

Add bridge API for sending messages

import { contextBridge, ipcRenderer } from 'electron';

export const Bridge = {
  app: appBridge,
};

contextBridge.exposeInMainWorld(
  'AppBridge',
   {
       app: {
           maximize() => ipcRenderer.send('app.maximize'),
           getUser() => ipcRenderer.invoke('app.get-user'),
           prompt(message) => ipcRenderer.send('app.prompt', message),
       }
   },
);

Link messages to controller

import { Controller } from '@nestjs/common';
import { BrowserWindow, dialog } from 'electron';
import { AppService } from './app.service';
import { HandleIPCMessageWithResult, HandleIPCMessage, IPCContext } from 'electron-ipc-transport';
import { Ctx, Payload } from '@nestjs/microservices';

@Controller()
export class AppController {
  constructor(private readonly appService: AppService) {
  }

  @HandleIPCMessageWithResult('app.get-user')
  getUser() {
    return {
        name: 'NimitzDEV'
    };
  }
    
  @HandleIPCMessage('app.prompt')
  promptFromMain(
    @Payload() data: string,
  ) {
    dialog.showMessageBox({
        title: 'Messages from renderer',
        message: data,
    });
  }

  @HandleIPCMessage('app.maximize')
  max(
    @Ctx() ctx: IPCContext,
  ) {
    BrowserWindow.fromWebContents(ctx.evt.sender).maximize();
  }
}

APIs

@HandleIPCMessageWithResult(channel)

As name suggest, methods decorated with this decorator will return it's results to renderer process. Corresponds to ipcRenderer.invoke and ipcRenderer.handle.

@HandleIPCMessage(channel)

Mthods decorated with this decorator will be called without passing it's results to renderer process.

Limitations

You could only pass all your parameters inside first parameter slot.

ipcRenderer.send('app.message', 'hello', 'word'); // @Payload will only received 'hello'
ipcRenderer.send('app.message', {title: 'hello', message: 'word'}); // This is the proper way to pass more than one parameters.

Interface

IPCContext contains one property call evt, it's the same as IpcMainEvent object.

License

This package is MIT Licensed.