the first part, up to the point where you get the ‘ionic serve’ command to work is what you need to be able to do development on the app and test it in a browser.
the second part is about how to build a version of the app that can be run on a device.
then at the end is a list of troubleshooting advice. If you encouter a problem that is not already listed, please consider adding it.
The majority of your development will be done using a browser. You will probably on begin to use an emulator once you need to simulate a real mobile device.
If you are just adding mobile support to plugins, remember that most of your development can be done using the online pre-built version at https://mobileapp.moodledemo.net/ (with Chrome or Chromium). However, if you want to be able to to write automated acceptance tests for the app then you need to follow this page at least as far as getting the ionic serve command to work on this page.
Requirements
Windows tip: ingore any use of the sudo command below. Just use the command without it. Most things work that way, and if they don’t try in a Powershell window that you have opened with ‘Run as administrator …’.
On Linux we recommend you use nvm – this lets you switch Node versions, and makes the install a bit easier than the official installation route.
nvm install latest
nvm use 11.12.0 # Or whatever number nvm install reported.
(Exact version is probably not critical. Moodle HQ devs report using both 8.12.x and 11.12.0 as of 2019-03-25.)
On Windows we recommend you use https://github.com/coreybutler/nvm-windows. Same nvm commands as for Linux.
On Mac users we recommend to install NodeJS via Macports.
(It may seem simpler and easier to install directly from http://nodejs.org, but actually it seems to me more tricky to get that to work. If you have previously installed Node directly, and want to switch to nvm, you need to un-install node completely before installing nvm – or Google for trouble-shooting instructions, for example https://github.com/coreybutler/nvm-windows/issues/58#issuecomment-272608696.)
Install ionic
npm cache clean
npm install -g cordova@8.1.2 ionic # (If it throws an EACCESS error, run it again with sudo)
Install the npm required packages
sudo npm install -g gulp # (This will install gulp in a folder that should be in the PATH)
Windows only: Native build dependencies
node-gyp requires native build tools for your platform. If you’re developing on Mac or Linux, you’ll probably have these already (refer to the docs if not), on Windows, run the following command as administrator (in cmd or Powershell):
Warning! this installer can take a very, very long time to run. We were seeing it take hours. Literally. Be prepared to be very patient. Don’t just make the natural assumption that it has crashed.
Mac only: Push notifications
Phonegap plugin push 1.9.0 requires CocoaPods to work on a Mac. The installation steps can be found in https://cocoapods.org/
sudo gem install cocoapods
pod setup
Please note that for compiling the app in Mac you need to open the Moodle.xcworkspace file, more information here: MOBILE-1970
Clone the app base code
Clone the code base into a local directory in your computer. It may be an idea to work from the integration branch rather than master.
Please, note that if you are creating a custom app with a custom URL scheme, you should edit the /package.json and /config.xml files and specify there your custom URL_SCHEME (replacing the existing value) and your GCMPN SENDER_ID.
The following command must be run in the project’s root folder:
npm run setup
If this fails, you can see what it is doing by looking at the ‘scripts’ section in package.json. At the moment it is doing npm install && cordova prepare && gulp. That is, running three commands back-to-back, but only carrying on if the previous one succeeds completely. You can try running the three commands separately. If you do, ionic serve (see below) may work, even if cordova prepare gives errors. You only really need cordova prepare to work if you are going to go on and build the app.
ionic serve --browser chromium # or chrome or whatever browser.
If you don’t want to open any browser you should run:
ionic serve -b
Congratulations! Now that you have got to the piont where the ‘ionic serve’ command works, you can start doing development on the app. You only need to read the rest of the page if you want to build packaged versions of the app.
to check that you fulfilled all requirements for the platform.
If you get errors while building, please see the Troubleshooting section below.
If using Ubuntu you should install the packages: gradle and libgradle-android-plugin-java (and all its dependencies) to build.
Compiling using AOT
Angular has 2 ways of compiling: JIT and AOT. Running “ionic serve” or “ionic build” compiles using JIT by default, which is faster to compile but the app takes longer to start.
When building for release you should always compile using AOT, otherwise the app can take too long to start in some devices. The default AOT compiling causes some issues with the database activity and the Mobile support for plugins, so you have to modify a couple of files in order to make this work.
First you need to open the file: node_modules/@angular/platform-browser-dynamic/esm5/platform-browser-dynamic.js. Search the variable called “_NO_RESOURCE_LOADER“, you’ll see it has a function named “get” with this line:
thrownew Error("No ResourceLoader implementation has been provided. Can't read the url \"" + url + "\"");
Remove that line and put this code instead:
url = 'templates/' + url;
var resolve;
var reject;
var promise = new Promise(function (res, rej) {
resolve = res;
reject = rej;
});
var xhr = new XMLHttpRequest();
xhr.open('GET', url, true);
xhr.responseType = 'text';
xhr.onload = function () {
// responseText is the old-school way of retrieving response (supported by IE8 & 9)// response/responseType properties were introduced in ResourceLoader Level2 spec (supported by IE10)var response = xhr.response || xhr.responseText;
// normalize IE9 bug (http://bugs.jquery.com/ticket/1450)var status = xhr.status === 1223 ? 204 : xhr.status;
// fix status code when it is 0 (0 status is undocumented).// Occurs when accessing file resources or on Android 4.1 stock browser// while retrieving files from application cache.if (status === 0) {
status = response ? 200 : 0;
}
if (200 <= status && status <= 300) {
resolve(response);
}
else {
reject("Failed to load " + url);
}
};
xhr.onerror = function () { reject("Failed to load " + url); };
xhr.send();
return promise;
We tried to replace the default loader with our own implementation, but we weren’t able to make the compiler work so the only solution left was to modify the default one.
Now you need to open the file: node_modules/@ionic/app-scripts/dist/util/config.js. In that file you need to remove the context.isProd condition from the options runMinifyJs and optimizeJs. So the final code for that part should be like this:
We want to compile in production mode but without optimizing and minifying Javascript because that breaks our plugins support. However, Ionic doesn’t let you do that, so the only option is to do this change.
With these changes done you can now compile using production mode:
npm run ionic:build -- --prod
This command will generate the app files and put them inside www folder. If you now want to install that app in a real device you can run “cordova run android” or “cordova build ios” (please don’t use “ionic cordova …” or “ionic serve” because it will override your build files!).
Could not resolve all dependencies for configuration ‘:_debugCompile’.
Open the Android SDK Manager and make sure you have installed: Android Support Repository, Android Support Library, Google Play Services and Google Repository.
Could not find com.android.support:support-v4:XXX
Open the file platforms/android/build.gradle and add this code at the end:
Error: Could not find gradle wrapper within Android SDK. Might need to update your Android SDK.
1. Download Android studio – https://developer.android.com/studio/
2. Copy the folder android-studio/plugins/android/lib/templates
3. Paste in the folder android-sdk-folder/Sdk/tools
Could not find com.android.support:support-v4:27.1.0
Open the file platforms/android/build.gradle and configure like this:
If you see this error in Ubuntu, run sudo apt-get install build-essential and retry.
Current working directory is not a Cordova-based project.
If you see this error during npm setup, run mkdir www and retry.
ReferenceError: internalBinding is not defined
This seems to be an error with ‘natives’ prior to 1.1.6. I fixed it using npm install natives@1.1.6.
ReferenceError: internalBinding is not defined
This seems to be an error with ‘natives’ prior to 1.1.6. I fixed it using npm install natives@1.1.6.
npm update check failed
I got the error
│ npm update check failed │
│ Try running with sudo or get access │
│ to the local update config store via │
│ sudo chown -R $USER:$(id -gn $USER) C:\Users\username\.config │
on Windows because I installed too much as admin, and the suggested command does not work on Windows. The is to manually check the ownership of all the files in C:\Users\username\.config\configstore. In my case it was update-notifier-npm.json which got changed to be owned by Administrator.
You need to heed the advice at https://www.npmjs.com/package/npm#installing-on-cygwin. Cygwin users are not welcome in the Node world. However, you just need to ensure that Msysgit is on your windows path and that the cygwin bin folder is not. Then always use another shell like Powershell for your Moodle mobile development. (You don’t need your Cygwin bin folder on the Windows path. It automatically gets added to the path when you lauch Cygwin bash.)
The product name change (<name> tag) in config.xml is not supported dynamically
According to Google, this happens when you create the iOS platform with a certain <name> and then you change that name in config.xml. It’s weird that the installation process does that, it should create the platform with the right name unless it was changed manually.
The solution seems to be removing and adding the iOS platform again:
ionic platform remove ios
ionic platform add ios
Note that this does not seem to prevent ionic –serve from serving a working app if you run gulp after npm run setup has failed with this error.
Failed to install ‘cordova-plugin-file-transfer’: CordovaError: Version of installed plugin: “cordova-plugin-file@4.3.3” does not satisfy dependency plugin requirement “cordova-plugin-file@>=5.0.0”.
The cordova-plugin-file version specified in config.xml is 6.0.1, for some reason the installation process installed a wrong version for that plugin. You can manually install the cordova-plugin-file plugin like this:
Please notice that if there is any plugin installed that depends on cordova-plugin-file you’ll have to remove and re-add them too.
Note that this does not seem to prevent ionic –serve from serving a working app if you run gulp after npm run setup has failed with this error.
If you get this error when trying to build the Moodle app with XCode, some dependencies might not have installed correctly.
Ensure you have followed the Mac only: Push notifications steps above (particularly opening the .xcworkspace file rather than the .xcodeproj file). Then run the following:
npm run setup
cd platforms/ios
pod install
Now try running the build again in XCode.
Windows: npm run ionic:serve hangs after “Starting ‘watch'”
This appears to have happened since the move to npx. Try running the npx commands generated by npm run directly in bash: