A fake file system for Deno binaries by Mandarine.
Leaf is a fake file system for Deno binaries. This means, you can save your files along with the binary generated by deno compile, this way, you can put all your files together in a single executable which leads to easier deployments and a more compacted deliverable output.
Using Leaf in your application is very simple, you just use the regular Deno APIs after you ran a 'leaf compile'. More on this below.
The Leaf.compile() method is responsible for creating a typescript file with your resources in it. This file is then compiled into your binary.
Leaf.compile() takes one argument containing the options to include.
// File: compile.ts
import { Leaf } from "https://deno.land/x/leaf/mod.ts";
Leaf.compile({
modulePath: "./myEntryPoint.ts",
contentFolders: ["./resources"],
// flags: [],
// output: ''
})modulePath and contentFolders are necessary.
modulePath: File to be compiled into a binary.contentFolders: Folders to be attached to the binary.flagsoptional: the Deno flags normally used fordeno compile.outputoptional: Replaces the--outputflags option.
Synchronously reads and returns the entire contents of a file as an array of bytes. TextDecoder can be used to transform the bytes to string if required. Reading a directory returns an empty data array.
const decoder = new TextDecoder("utf-8");
const data = Deno.readFileSync("hello.txt");
console.log(decoder.decode(data));Reads and returns the entire contents of a file as an array of bytes. TextDecoder can be used to transform the bytes to string if required. Reading a directory returns an empty data array.
const decoder = new TextDecoder("utf-8");
const data = await Deno.readFile("hello.txt");
console.log(decoder.decode(data));Synchronously reads and returns the entire contents of a file as utf8 encoded string.
const data = Deno.readTextFileSync("hello.txt");
console.log(data);Reads and returns the entire contents of a file as utf8 encoded string.
const data = await Deno.readTextFile("hello.txt");
console.log(data);We run the compile.ts script which creates the file system .ts which then runs deno compile to build the final binary.
// compile.ts
import { Leaf } from "https://deno.land/x/leaf/mod.ts";
Leaf.compile({
modulePath: "./myEntryPoint.ts",
contentFolders: ["./resources"]
})./resources/hello.txt
Hello World
myEntryPoint.ts:
console.log(Deno.readTextFileSync("./resources/hello.txt"));deno run --allow-all --unstable compile.ts./myEntryPoint (.exe if windows)
# output: Hello WorldFor questions & community support, please visit our Discord Channel or join us on our twitter.
In order to submit improvements to the code, open a PR and wait for it to review. We appreciate you doing this.
We would love to have you in our community, please submit an issue to provide information about a bug, feature, or improvement you would like.
- Author : Andres Pirela
- Website : https://www.mandarinets.org/
- Twitter : @mandarinets
- Discord : Click here