nbpackage
is a command line tool and library for packaging the NetBeans IDE or
a NetBeans platform application into a native installer or package. It supports
optional bundling of a Java runtime to make a self-contained application. It is
inspired by the JDK's jpackage
tool, but tailored to the needs of the IDE and
RCP, with a different range of packagers, and some support for cross-platform
package building.
Run nbpackage --help
to see options.
While options for the packagers can be set on the command line, the easiest way is to use the support for a configuration file in Java Properties format.
Use the --save-config
option to output all available options, or just the ones
for a specific packager, to a properties file. Using a separate configuration file
for each package type is the best option. The output file includes comments for
each available option.
eg. to build an InnoSetup installer, first create the configuration file -
nbpackage --type windows-innosetup --save-config inno.properties
Edit the properties file, with package name, customized icons, path to Java
runtime, etc. As well as the path to the native build tool. Paths can be prefixed
with ${CONFIG}/
to be relative to configuration file location.
Then build the installer from the IDE / RCP zip using -
nbpackage --config inno.properties --input <PATH_TO_ZIP>
Use the --verbose
option to see the output of the native packaging tools.
Most packagers use overridable templates, for build files, .desktop
files, .plist
files, etc. To save the existing templates for editing, use -
nbpackage --type <PACKAGE_TYPE> --save-templates <PATH_TO_FOLDER>
Edit the files, and add the paths to the relevant properties in the configuration
file (using ${CONFIG}/
relative paths where appropriate).
nbpackage
will first build an image - a directory with the correct layout and
additional files for passing to the packaging tool. It is possible to use the
--image-only
and --input-image
options to perform this in two separate passes
to allow for customization of the process.
Create a Linux AppImage. Requires download of the AppImageTool, making it executable, and adding the path to the configuration file.
Create a Linux DEB package. Requires dpkg
, dpkg-deb
and fakeroot
to be
available on the system.
Create a Linux RPM package. Requires rpm
and rpmbuild
to be available on the
system.
Create a macOS PKG installer. Requires swift
to build the launcher, codesign
if signing binaries, and pkgbuild
to build the actual package.
If code signing identities are configured, the package will be signed, as well as all native binaries including those inside JAR files. The search patterns for native binaries and JAR files with native binaries can be adapted if necessary. The built package should then pass the Apple notarization process (submission and stapling must be done manually).
Create a Windows Inno Setup installer. Requires download of the
installer tools, and adding the path to the iscc
compiler to the packager
configuration. See also further information on the iscc tool.
Inno Setup works well with Wine for building installers on other OS. Write a short
shell script that invokes the iscc
tool via wine
and use this in the packager
configuration - eg.
#!/bin/sh
wine C:\\Program\ Files\ \(x86\)\\Inno\ Setup\ 6\\ISCC.exe $1
Mainly for debugging purposes, although can be used to bundle an RCP application with local runtime. As the IDE launcher does not yet support relative JDK location, this is less useful there.
Building nbpackage
requires JDK 11+. The project uses the Maven Wrapper.
Building in the IDE or executing mvnw package
will build the tool. Output can
be found in target/nbpackage-<VERSION>/
, as well as adjacent source and binary
archives.
Run ./nbpackage-<VERSION>/bin/nbpackage --help
to check.