Hooks
In Electron Forge, hooks are asynchronous callback functions that allow you to insert your own logic at different points in the development or build process.
Each hook function comes with the Forge configuration object as a first parameter.
{% hint style="info" %} To read more about the different stages in Forge's build process, please refer to the build-lifecycle.md documentation. {% endhint %}
Simple hooks
In Electron Forge, most hooks are simple hooks, which perform side effects during the build lifecycle without directly affecting subsequent steps in the build.
generateAssets
- Arguments:
config:
ResolvedForgeConfig
- Forge configuration objectplatform: string
- Operating system platformarch: string
- CPU architecture
- Returns:
Promise<void>
generateAssets()
is invoked before Forge's start
or package
commands.
You can use this hook to generate any static files or resources your app requires on runtime but aren't in the source code.
For instance, you could use this hook to generate a license file containing the license of all your dependencies.
postStart
- Arguments:
config:
ResolvedForgeConfig
- Forge configuration objectappProcess:
ChildProcess
- Node.js child process instance
- Returns:
Promise<void>
postStart()
called after Forge's start
command launches the app in dev mode.
You can use this hook to attach listeners to the spawned child process.
{% code title="forge.config.js" fullWidth="false" %}
module.exports = {
hooks: {
postStart: async (forgeConfig, appProcess) => {
console.log(`Spawned child pid: ${appProcess.pid}`);
}
}
};
{% endcode %}
prePackage
- Arguments:
config:
ResolvedForgeConfig
- Forge configuration objectplatform: string
- Operating system platformarch: string
- CPU architecture
- Returns:
Promise<void>
prePackage()
is called before Forge runs Electron Packager in the package
step .
packageAfterCopy
- Arguments:
config:
ResolvedForgeConfig
- Forge configuration objectbuildPath: string
- the app's temporary folder pathelectronVersion: string
- the app's Electron versionplatform: string
- Operating system platformarch: string
- CPU architecture
- Returns:
Promise<void>
packageAfterCopy()
is called inside the afterCopy
hook of Electron Packager.
During Forge's package
step, Electron Packager copies your app's build directory to a temporary folder.
The afterCopy
hook runs after this copy step.
packageAfterPrune
- Arguments:
config:
ResolvedForgeConfig
- Forge configuration objectbuildPath: string
- the app's temporary folder pathelectronVersion: string
- the app's Electron versionplatform: string
- Operating system platformarch: string
- CPU architecture
- Returns:
Promise<void>
packageAfterPrune()
is called inside the afterPrune
hook of Electron Packager.
During Forge's package
step, Electron Packager prunes non-production node_modules
dependencies from the temporary folder your app is copied to. This step minimizes the size of your app's production bundle.
The afterPrune
hook runs after this prune step.
{% hint style="info" %}
packageAfterPrune()
will have no effect if your packagerOptions.prune
option is set to false
.
{% endhint %}
packageAfterExtract
- Arguments:
config:
ResolvedForgeConfig
- Forge configuration objectbuildPath: string
- the Electron binary's temporary folder pathelectronVersion: string
- the app's Electron versionplatform: string
- Operating system platformarch: string
- CPU architecture
- Returns:
Promise<void>
packageAfterExtract()
is called inside the afterExtract
hook of Electron Packager.
During Forge's package
step, Electron Packager extracts your Electron binary into a temporary folder.
The afterExtract
hook runs after this extract step.
postPackage
- Arguments:
config:
ResolvedForgeConfig
- Forge configuration objectpackageResult: Object
platform: string
- Operating system platformarch: string
- CPU architectureoutputPaths: string[]
- filesystem paths for package output
- Returns:
Promise<void>
\
postPackage()
is called after Forge's package
step has successfully completed.
For example:
{% code title="forge.config.js" %}
module.exports = {
hooks: {
postPackage: async (forgeConfig, options) => {
console.info('Packages built at:', options.outputPaths);
}
}
};
{% endcode %}
preMake
- Arguments:
config:
ResolvedForgeConfig
- Forge configuration object
- Returns:
Promise<void>
preMake()
is called before the make
step runs.
Mutating hooks
In Electron Forge, mutating hooks are a special kind of hook that return the same type of value as their second parameter.
The returned value will replace the original parameter's value for subsequent steps in the Forge lifecycle.
postMake
- Arguments:
config:
ResolvedForgeConfig
- Forge configuration objectmakeResults:
MakeResult
[]
- Returns:
Promise<
MakeResult
[] | void>
postMake()
is called after Forge's make
step has successfully completed.
It is passed an array of MakeResult
objects that are output from the make
step. If you wish to mutate the array of Make results, you can return a new array of MakeResult
objects that Electron Forge can use for future steps.
readPackageJson
- Arguments:
config:
ResolvedForgeConfig
- Forge configuration objectpackageJson: Record<string, unknown>
- Full package.json object
- Returns:
Promise<Record<string, unknown> | void>
readPackageJson()
is called every time Forge attempts to read your package.json
file.
The full package.json object is passed in as a parameter. If you want to modify that object in any way, you must do so and return the new value for Forge to use.
This is useful to set things like the package.json version
field at runtime.
{% code title="forge.config.js" %}
module.exports = {
hooks: {
readPackageJson: async (forgeConfig, packageJson) => {
packageJson.version = '4.0.0';
return packageJson;
}
}
};
{% endcode %}
{% hint style="warning" %}
Note: this hook will not change the name or version used by Electron Packager to customize your app metadata, as that is read prior to this hook being called (during Electron Packager's afterCopy
hooks).
{% endhint %}