Electron IPC is good, but difficult to maintain and scale, either because of the numerous channels you have to remember, or because of the inconsistent API between processes and the absence of inferred types of your channels and handlers. These are some of the things that interprocess comes to solve!
๐ฌ Features
- ๐โBest-in-class DX with a fully-typed API
- ๐ง โEnchanced and consistent API
- ๐ฅโType-safe and scalable
- ๐ชโCode splitting support
- ๐ธ๏ธโAll edges connected (APIs to handle all processes)
- ๐โ
invoke
andhandle
methods in both processes with the same expected behavior
๐ฌ Installation
In your terminal, run:
yarn add interprocess
# OR
npm i interprocess
๐ฌ Usage
Let's build something simple that can show you some of the interprocess's power!
First, create the following folders at src
:
-
shared/ipcs
(this folder structure is optional)
Then, create a file named as index.ts
in the ipcs
folder with the following content:
import { createInterprocess } from 'interprocess'
export const { ipcMain, ipcRenderer, exposeApiToGlobalWindow } =
createInterprocess({
main: {
async getPing(_, data: 'ping') {
const message = `from renderer: ${data} on main process`
console.log(message)
return message
},
},
renderer: {
async getPong(_, data: 'pong') {
const message = `from main: ${data} on renderer process`
console.log(message)
return message
},
},
})
On the main process:
import { BrowserWindow, app } from 'electron'
import { ipcMain } from 'shared/ipcs'
const { handle, invoke } = ipcMain
app.whenReady().then(() => {
const mainWindow = new BrowserWindow({
webPreferences: {
preload: path.join(__dirname, '../preload/index.js'),
sandbox: false, // sandbox must be false
},
})
handle.getPing()
mainWindow.webContents.on('dom-ready', () => {
invoke.getPong(mainWindow, 'pong')
})
})
In the preload script:
import { exposeApiToGlobalWindow } from 'shared/ipcs'
const { key, api } = exposeApiToGlobalWindow({
exposeAll: true, // expose handlers, invokers and removers
})
declare global {
interface Window {
[key]: typeof api
}
}
On the renderer process:
const { invoke, handle } = window.api
invoke.getPing('ping')
handle.getPong()
This is a simple way to work with interprocess, but there's a lot of more cool features you can take advantage, like overrides, code splitting, invoker's response (for renderer and main process ๐) and more. See the Knowledge section for more!
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