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Version: 3.9.0-beta.104 (Latest)

Build for Production

Build Machine Requirements​

Getting the Code​

With Git:

# Clone the remote repository to your local machine
git clone https://github.com/OHIF/Viewers.git

More on: git clone, git checkout

From .zip:

OHIF/Viewers: master.zip

Restore Dependencies & Build​

Open your terminal, and navigate to the directory containing the source files. Next run these commands:

# If you haven't already, enable yarn workspaces
yarn config set workspaces-experimental true

# Restore dependencies
yarn install

# Build source code for production
yarn run build

If everything worked as expected, you should have a new dist/ directory in the platform/app/dist folder. It should roughly resemble the following:

<root>platform/app/dist/
├── app-config.js
├── app.bundle.js
├── app.css
├── index.html
├── manifest.json
├── service-worker.js
└── ...

By default, the build output will connect to OHIF's publicly accessible PACS. If this is your first time setting up the OHIF Viewer, it is recommended that you test with these default settings. After testing, you can find instructions on how to configure the project for your own imaging archive below.

Configuration​

The configuration for our viewer is in the <root>platform/app/public/config directory. Our build process knows which configuration file to use based on the APP_CONFIG environment variable. By default, its value is [config/default.js][default-config]. The majority of the viewer's features, and registered extension's features, are configured using this file.

The easiest way to apply your own configuration is to modify the default.js file. For more advanced configuration options, check out our configuration essentials guide.

Next Steps​

Deploying Build Output​

Drag-n-drop

Easy

Advanced

Testing Build Output Locally​

A quick way to test your build output locally is to spin up a small webserver. You can do this by running the following commands in the dist/ output directory:

# Install http-server as a globally available package
yarn global add http-server

# Change the directory to the platform/app

# Serve the files in our current directory
npx serve ./dist -c ../public/serve.json
caution

In the video below notice that there is platform/viewer which has been renamed to platform/app in the latest version

Automating Builds and Deployments​

If you found setting up your environment and running all of these steps to be a bit tedious, then you are in good company. Thankfully, there are a large number of tools available to assist with automating tasks like building and deploying web application. For a starting point, check out this repository's own use of: