"use strict"; Object.defineProperty(exports, "__esModule", { value: true }); const tslib_1 = require("tslib"); /* * fork from https://github.com/domenic/opener */ const child_process_1 = tslib_1.__importDefault(require("child_process")); const os_1 = tslib_1.__importDefault(require("os")); module.exports = function opener(args, tool) { let platform = process.platform; args = [].concat(args); // Attempt to detect Windows Subystem for Linux (WSL). // WSL itself as Linux (which works in most cases), but in // this specific case we need to treat it as actually being Windows. // The "Windows-way" of opening things through cmd.exe works just fine here, // whereas using xdg-open does not, since there is no X Windows in WSL. if (platform === 'linux' && os_1.default.release().toLowerCase().indexOf('microsoft') !== -1) { platform = 'win32'; } // http://stackoverflow.com/q/1480971/3191, but see below for Windows. let command; switch (platform) { case 'win32': { command = 'cmd.exe'; if (tool) { args.unshift(tool); } break; } case 'darwin': { command = 'open'; if (tool) { args.unshift(tool); args.unshift('-a'); } break; } default: { command = tool || 'xdg-open'; break; } } if (platform === 'win32') { // On Windows, we really want to use the "start" command. // But, the rules regarding arguments with spaces, and escaping them with quotes, // can get really arcane. So the easiest way to deal with this is to pass off the // responsibility to "cmd /c", which has that logic built in. // // Furthermore, if "cmd /c" double-quoted the first parameter, // then "start" will interpret it as a window title, // so we need to add a dummy empty-string window title: http://stackoverflow.com/a/154090/3191 // // Additionally, on Windows ampersand needs to be escaped when passed to "start" args = args.map(value => { return value.replace(/&/g, '^&'); }); args = ['/c', 'start', '""'].concat(args); } return child_process_1.default.spawn(command, args, { shell: false, detached: true }); };