* Add a new option to remove unused commands
* Fix compile
* Add markers to all core plugins
* Clippy
* Add allow unused when running with this
* Use build script to generate allowed-commands.json
* Clean up and add proper reruns
* Wrong path
* Revert to #[cfg_attr(not(debug_assertions), allow(unused))]
* Add change files
* Some more docs
* Add version requirement note
* Avoid rerun if no capabilities folder
* Remove unused box
* small cleanup
* fix channel
* implement for app handler too
* rely on core:default for channel perms
* Move this feature to config
* Docs change
* Forget one last remove_unused_commands
* Remove removeUnusedCommands from helloworld
* tell handler that the app ACL manifest exists
* update change file
* update doc
* update change file
* Use a struct to pass the data instead of env var
* Clippy
* Fix can't exclude inlined plugins on Windows
due to UNC paths...
* Apply suggestion from code review
* Remove remove on empty to tauri-build
* Revert "Remove remove on empty to tauri-build"
This reverts commit b727dd621e.
* Centralize remove_file(allowed_commands_file_path)
* Escape glob pattern
* update change file
* remove unused commands for dev too
* Update crates/tauri-utils/src/config.rs
Co-authored-by: Fabian-Lars <github@fabianlars.de>
* regen schema
---------
Co-authored-by: Lucas Nogueira <lucas@tauri.app>
Co-authored-by: Fabian-Lars <github@fabianlars.de>
tauri-codegen
| Component | Version |
|---|---|
| tauri-codegen |
About Tauri
Tauri is a polyglot and generic system that is very composable and allows engineers to make a wide variety of applications. It is used for building applications for Desktop Computers using a combination of Rust tools and HTML rendered in a Webview. Apps built with Tauri can ship with any number of pieces of an optional JS API / Rust API so that webviews can control the system via message passing. In fact, developers can extend the default API with their own functionality and bridge the Webview and Rust-based backend easily.
Tauri apps can have custom menus and have tray-type interfaces. They can be updated, and are managed by the user's operating system as expected. They are very small, because they use the system's webview. They do not ship a runtime, since the final binary is compiled from rust. This makes the reversing of Tauri apps not a trivial task.
This module
- Embed, hash, and compress assets, including icons for the app as well as the tray icon.
- Parse
tauri.conf.jsonat compile time and generate the Config struct.
To learn more about the details of how all of these pieces fit together, please consult this ARCHITECTURE.md document.
Semver
tauri is following Semantic Versioning 2.0.
Licenses
Code: (c) 2021 - The Tauri Programme within The Commons Conservancy.
MIT or MIT/Apache 2.0 where applicable.
Logo: CC-BY-NC-ND
- Original Tauri Logo Designs by Daniel Thompson-Yvetot and Guillaume Chau