# Maintaining Single Executable Applications support Support for [single executable applications][] is one of the key technical priorities identified for the success of Node.js. ## High level strategy From the [Next-10 discussions][] there are 2 approaches the project believes are important to support: ### Compile with Node.js into executable This is the approach followed by [boxednode][]. No additional code within the Node.js project is needed to support the option of compiling a bundled application along with Node.js into a single executable application. ### Bundle into existing Node.js executable This is the approach followed by [pkg][]. The project does not plan to provide the complete solution but instead the key elements which are required in the Node.js executable in order to enable bundling with the pre-built Node.js binaries. This includes: * Looking for a segment within the executable that holds bundled code. * Running the bundled code when such a segment is found. It is left up to external tools/solutions to: * Bundle code into a single script. * Generate a command line with appropriate options. * Add a segment to an existing Node.js executable which contains the command line and appropriate headers. * Re-generate or removing signatures on the resulting executable * Provide a virtual file system, and hooking it in if needed to support native modules or reading file contents. However, the project also maintains a separate tool, [postject][], for injecting arbitrary read-only resources into the binary such as those needed for bundling the application into the runtime. ## Planning Planning for this feature takes place in the [single-executable repository][]. ## Upcoming features Currently, only running a single embedded CommonJS file is supported but support for the following features are in the list of work we'd like to get to: * Running an embedded ESM file. * Running an archive of multiple files. * Embedding [Node.js CLI options][] into the binary. * [XCOFF][] executable format. * Run tests on Linux architectures/distributions other than AMD64 Ubuntu. ## Disabling single executable application support To disable single executable application support, build Node.js with the `--disable-single-executable-application` configuration option. ## Implementation When built with single executable application support, the Node.js process uses [`postject-api.h`][] to check if the `NODE_JS_CODE` section exists in the binary. If it is found, it passes the buffer to [`single_executable_application.js`][], which executes the contents of the embedded script. [Next-10 discussions]: https://github.com/nodejs/next-10/blob/main/meetings/summit-nov-2021.md#single-executable-applications [Node.js CLI options]: https://nodejs.org/api/cli.html [XCOFF]: https://www.ibm.com/docs/en/aix/7.2?topic=formats-xcoff-object-file-format [`postject-api.h`]: https://github.com/nodejs/node/blob/71951a0e86da9253d7c422fa2520ee9143e557fa/test/fixtures/postject-copy/node_modules/postject/dist/postject-api.h [`single_executable_application.js`]: https://github.com/nodejs/node/blob/main/lib/internal/main/single_executable_application.js [boxednode]: https://github.com/mongodb-js/boxednode [pkg]: https://github.com/vercel/pkg [postject]: https://github.com/nodejs/postject [single executable applications]: https://github.com/nodejs/node/blob/main/doc/contributing/technical-priorities.md#single-executable-applications [single-executable repository]: https://github.com/nodejs/single-executable