TurboWarp as a desktop app.
If you're looking for downloads, head to: https://desktop.turbowarp.org/
Licensed under the GPLv3.0. See LICENSE for more information.
Parts of this repository are based on LLK/scratch-desktop.
The website source code is in the docs
folder.
We use submodules, so clone using:
git clone --recursive https://github.com/TurboWarp/desktop turbowarp-desktop
or run this after cloning:
git submodule init
git submodule update
Install dependencies using:
npm ci
Then fetch extra library, packager, and extension files using:
npm run fetch
Repeat the three previous sets of commands every time you pull changes from GitHub.
Due to the security requirements mandated by custom extensions existing, our desktop app is significantly more complicated than Scratch's.
- src-main is what runs in Electron's main process. There is no build step; this code is included as-is.
src-main/entrypoint.js
is the entry point to the entire app. - src-renderer-webpack runs in an Electron renderer process to make the editor work. This is built by webpack as dist-renderer-webpack.
- src-renderer also runs in an Electron renderer process, but without webpack. This is used for things like the privacy policy window.
- src-preload runs as preload scripts in an Electron renderer process. They export glue functions to allow renderer and main to talk to each other in a somewhat controlled manner.
- dist-library-files and dist-extensions contain additional static resources managed by
npm run fetch
To build the webpack portions in src-renderer-webpack for development builds, run this:
npm run webpack:compile
You can also run this instead for source file changes to immediately trigger rebuilds:
npm run webpack:watch
Once you have everything compiled and fetched, you are ready to package it up for Electron. For development, start a development Electron instance with:
npm run electron:start
In Linux, The app icon won't work in the development version, but it will work in the packaged version.
We've found that development can work pretty well if you open two terminals side-by-side and run npm run webpack:watch
in one and npm run electron:start
in the other. You can refresh the windows with ctrl+R or cmd+R for renderer file changes to apply, and manually restart the app for main file changes to apply.
On some Linux distributions, Electron will crash with the message The SUID sandbox helper binary was found, but is not configured correctly. Rather than run without sandboxing I'm aborting now. You need to make sure that /home/.../turbowarp-desktop/node_modules/electron/dist/chrome-sandbox is owned by root and has mode 4755.
. Notably we have seen this happen on Debian 10 and earlier and Ubuntu 24.04 and later.
For development, you can run these commands to enable unprivileged user namespaces until you reboot:
# Enable unprivileged user namespaces.
sudo sysctl -w kernel.unprivileged_userns_clone=1
# Stop AppArmor from preventing unprivileged user namespace creation by default.
# If your distribution does not use AppArmor then you can ignore the error.
sudo sysctl -w kernel.apparmor_restrict_unprivileged_userns=0
There are ways to make this permanent, but we don't think you should be making permanent kernel configuration changes just to develop this app. This error won't happen in the final .deb package, Flathub, or Snap Store releases.
The development version of the app will be larger and slower than the final release builds.
Build an optimized version of the webpack portions with:
npm run webpack:prod
Then to package up the final Electron binaries, use either our build script release-automation/build.js
(see release-automation/README.md) or the electron-builder CLI. Either way the final builds are saved in the dist
folder. Here are some examples using the electron-builder CLI directly:
# You can also do manual builds with electron-builder's CLI, for example:
# Windows installer
npx electron-builder --windows nsis --x64
# macOS DMG
npx electron-builder --mac dmg --universal
# Linux Debian
npx electron-builder --linux deb
You can typically only package for a certain operating system while on that operating system.
TurboWarp Desktop lets you configure custom JS and CSS without rebuilding the app.
Find TurboWarp Desktop's data path by using the list below or by clicking "?" in the top right corner, then "Desktop Settings", then "Open User Data", then opening the highlighted folder, or refer to this list:
- Windows (except Microsoft Store):
%APPDATA%/turbowarp-desktop
- Microsoft Store: Open
%LOCALAPPDATA%/Packages
, find the folder with the wordTurboWarpDesktop
in it, then openLocalCache/Roaming/turbowarp-desktop
- macOS (except Mac App Store):
~/Library/Application Support/turbowarp-desktop
- Mac App Store:
~/Library/Containers/org.turbowarp.desktop/Data/Library/Application Support/turbowarp-desktop
(note that theorg.turbowarp.desktop
part may appear asTurboWarp
in Finder) - Linux (except Flatpak and Snap):
~/.config/turbowarp-desktop
- Linux (Flatpak):
~/.var/app/org.turbowarp.TurboWarp/config/turbowarp-desktop
- Linux (Snap):
~/snap/turbowarp-desktop/current/.config/turbowarp-desktop
Create the file userscript.js
in this folder to configure custom JS. Create the file userstyle.css
in this folder to configure custom CSS. Completely restart TurboWarp Desktop (including all windows) to apply.