https://packager.turbowarp.org/
Converts Scratch projects into HTML files, zip archives, or executable programs for Windows, macOS, and Linux.
Install dependencies:
npm ci
Start in development mode:
npm start
Then visit http://localhost:8947. Manually refresh to see changes.
Packaged projects generated while in development mode should not be distributed. Instead, you should run a production build to significantly reduce file size of both the website and the packager.
npm run build-prod
Output will be located in the dist
folder.
The general layout of src
is:
- packager: The code that downloads and packages projects.
- p4: The Svelte website for the packager. "p4" is the name that the packager uses internally to refer to itself.
- scaffolding: A minimal Scratch project player. Handles most of the boring details of running Scratch projects like handling mouse inputs.
- common: Some files used by both scaffolding and the packager.
- addons: Optional addons such as gamepad support or pointerlock.
- locales: Translations. en.json contains the original English messages. The other languages are translated by volunteers and imported by an automated script. (you can help)
- build: Various build-time scripts such as webpack plugins and loaders.
We strive to make the packager easy to fork, even for mods that aren't based on TurboWarp. Reading this section, at least the first half, should make it much easier to do so.
If you want to change the VM/renderer/etc. used, just npm install
or npm link
a different scratch-vm/scratch-render/etc. and rebuild. You can even install a vanilla scratch-vm and all core functionality will still work (but optional features such as interpolation, high quality pen, stage size, etc. may not work)
If you encounter errors about dependencies missing, usually these will be fixed after running another npm install
.
The packager is deployed as a simple static website. You can host it anywhere by just copying the dist
folder after a build.
We use GitHub Actions and GitHub Pages to manage our deployment. If you want to do this too:
- Fork the repository on GitHub and push your changes.
- Go to your fork's settings on GitHub and enable GitHub Pages with the source set to GitHub Actions.
- Go to the "Actions" tab and enable GitHub Actions if it isn't already enabled.
- Go to your fork > Actions > Deploy > Manually run the action on the branch of your choice (probably master).
- In a few minutes, your site will automatically be built and deployed to GitHub Pages.
We ask that you at least take a moment to rename the website by editting src/packager/brand.js
with your own app name, links, etc.
Large files such as NW.js, Electron, and WKWebView executables are stored on an external server outside of this repository. While we aren't actively removing old files (the server still serves files unused since November 2020), we can't promise they will exist forever. The packager uses a secure checksum to validate these downloads. Forks are free to use our servers, but it's easy to setup your own if you'd prefer (it's just a static file server; see src/packager/large-assets.js
for more information).
Set the environment variable ENABLE_SERVICE_WORKER
to 1
to enable service worker for offline support (experimental, not 100% reliable). This is not recommended in development. Our GitHub Actions deploy script uses this by default.
The packager supports generating "standalone builds" that are single HTML files containing the entire packager. Large files such as Electron binaries will still be downloaded from a remote server as needed. You can download prebuilt standalone builds from our GitHub releases. These can be useful if our website is blocked or you don't have a reliable internet connection. Note that standalone builds do not contain an update checker, so do check on your own occasionally.
To make a production standalone build locally:
npm run build-standalone-prod
The build outputs to dist/standalone.html
.
See node-api-docs/README.md for Node.js API documentation.
To build the Node.js module locally:
npm run build-node-prod
Copyright (C) 2021-2022 Thomas Weber
This project is licensed under the Apache License, version 2.0. See LICENSE for more information.