- Accelerometer
- Camera
- Capture
- Compass
- Connection
- Contacts
- Device
- Events
- File
- Geolocation
- Globalization
- InAppBrowser
- Media
- Notification
- Splashscreen
- Storage
- Overview
- Platform Guides
- The Cordova Command-line Interface
- Command-Line Usage
- Privacy Guide
- Upgrading Guides
- Project Settings
- Plugin Development Guide
- Domain Whitelist Guide
- Embedding WebView
Project Settings
You can set various application configuration parameters using a platform-agnostic configuration file, config.xml
.
This file is based on the W3C Packaged Web Apps (Widgets) specification.
The location of the config.xml
file is different depending on the platform. The contents, in general, are not.
Platform-Specific Properties
As with any abstraction layer, Apache Cordova cannot be a perfect silver bullet. As such, some native and platform-specific
properties, characteristics and behaviours are encapsulated as much as possible as <preference>
elements inside the
config.xml
file. The following sub-sections linked to are guides which go into more details about these preferences.
- Project Settings for iOS
- Project Settings for Android
- Project Settings for BlackBerry
- Project Settings for Windows Phone 7
- Project Settings for Windows Phone 8
- Project Settings for Windows 8
- Project Settings for FirefoxOS
config.xml Elements
The Apache Cordova project strives abstract away native platform specifics via web-inspired and web-based abstractions that are heavily standards driven and adopted by the web community. Please take a few minutes to familiarize yourself with the config.xml specification, to understand the type of application metadata the Apache Cordova project aims to abstract and provide simple entry points for.
An example:
<widget>
<preference name="MySetting" value="true" />
<plugins>
<plugin name="MyPlugin" value="MyPluginClass" />
</plugins>
<access origin="*" />
</widget>
A list of supported elements across major platforms which are supported in Apache Cordova follow.
<plugin>
These elements map to native APIs that the application accesses. At
runtime, the Apache Cordova framework checks the <plugin>
elements
and maps them to native code to enable your Cordova application to
access device APIs otherwise unavailable to typical web-based
applications.
<access>
These elements define how your whitelist works. Please see the Domain Whitelist Guide for more information.
<content>
This element defines your application's start page relative to the
project's standard web assets root folder. The default is
index.html
.