In this guide, we will show you how to write a hello world service app.
You can start developing a service app by using a service app template.
Copy the template, and start editing lib/index.js. The template contains code to print hello world.
You can decide which lwnode executable to use when running a service app. For example, you can either use lwnode preinstalled on a Tizen platform, or use lwnode executable included when the service app is packaged. The latter approach allows you to use a lwnode executable specific for each service app.
First, add a lwnode executable to your app.
mkdir bin
cd bin
# Use the preinstalled lwnode on Tizen
ln -s /usr/bin/lwnode {lwnode path}/lwnode
# OR Include lwnode for this service
cp lwnode {lwnode path}/lwnodeThen, install Express.js module.
npx pnpm i expressWhile developing, you can run the service app on Linux as follows.
./bin/lwnode libBuild Tizen RPMs as follows.
gbs -c .github/gbs.conf build \
-A armv7l \
-P profile.t70std \
-B ~/GBS-ROOT/helloworld \
--include-all --incrementalIn this example, we use ~/GBS-ROOT/helloworld as our output directory. Please note that gbs only works if the current directory is under a git repo, i.e., gbs searches for .git directory in your project root.
Install the rpm package on a target device. You can find the package in the following directory.
~/GBS-ROOT/helloworld/local/repos/t65std/armv7l/RPMS/helloworld-1.0.0-1.armv7l.rpmInstall the package on a target device
rpm -Uvh --nodeps --force helloworld-1.0.0-1.armv7l.rpm
Open http://{target device IP}:3000 on a Web browser to see the service running. In this example, hello world should be printed on the browser.