Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
242 lines (173 loc) · 9.78 KB

readme.md

File metadata and controls

242 lines (173 loc) · 9.78 KB

packtory

Effortless code bundling and publishing for npm packages

🚀 Simplify and Automate Your Code Bundling and Publishing Workflow with packtory 🚀

Tired of restrictive monorepo conventions? Fed up with complex workspace setups? Want your monorepo to feel as smooth as a single codebase, effortlessly referencing local files? Think semantic versioning (semver) adds unnecessary complexity, and every version should be treated as potentially breaking anyway? Look no further.

Say goodbye to:

  • 🔗 Cumbersome workspaces
  • 📦 Dependency linking during development
  • 🙅‍♂️ Manual file selection (e.g. via .npmignore or files)
  • 📄 Shipping unnecessary files (e.g. build configs, tests)
  • 🔄 Manual versioning

🌟 Introducing packtory: Your Code Organization and Packaging Game Changer 🌟

Key Features:

  • Organize with Freedom: Manage your monorepo without confining conventions or workspace limitations. packtory simplifies it, just like a single codebase.
  • Effortless Dependency Bundling: Forget manual dependency linking. packtory automatically detects and bundles dependencies, freeing you to focus on your code.
  • Clean and Efficient Packaging: Package only essential files, excluding devDependencies, CI configurations, and tests. Keep your npm package clean and efficient.
  • Revolutionary Automatic Versioning: Choose manual versioning or let packtory handle it. In automatic mode, it calculates versions intelligently, ensuring reproducibility without complexity.
  • Seamless CI Pipeline Integration: Easily integrate packtory into your CI pipelines for automatic publishing with every commit. No more intricate checks to decide what to publish.

Quick Start

The quickest way to leverage packtory is through its command-line interface (CLI).

Installation:

npm install -D @packtory/cli

Configuration:

Create a configuration file named packtory.config.js in your project's root:

import path from 'node:path';
import fs from 'node:fs';

export const config = {
    // Customize your registry settings, if needed
    registrySettings: { token: process.env.NPM_TOKEN },

    // Common settings shared among packages
    commonPackageSettings: {
        sourcesFolder: path.join(process.cwd(), 'dist/'),
        mainPackageJson: fs.readFileSync('./package.json', { encoding: 'utf8' })
    },

    // Define your packages
    packages: [
        {
            name: 'first-package',
            entryPoints: [ { js: 'first.js' } ],
        },
        {
            name: 'second-package',
            entryPoints: [ { js: 'second.js' } ],
            entryPoints: ,
            bundleDependencies: ['first']
        }
    ]
};

Publishing:

Execute the following command from the root of your project, no worries it runs in dry-run mode by default:

npx packtory publish

For more details about the CLI application have a look at the full documentation.

Concept

Bundling

Packtory guarantees minimal packages with:

  • No published devDependencies
  • No unnecessary files, including CI configurations

How Bundling Works:

  1. All source files referenced from the entry point files are resolved into a graph.
  2. Imports of node_modules and node built-ins are detected and tracked to create a minimal package.json later.
  3. If bundle dependencies are given, some import statements will be rewritten. For example, if a file in package first imports a file in package second, the import statement will be rewritten accordingly (e.g., from import bar from './bar.js' to import bar from 'second/bar.js').
  4. A package.json will be generated, and the version numbers of node_modules will be taken from the mainPackageJson provided in the configuration.

Publishing

How Publishing Works:

Packtory supports two versioning modes:

  1. Automatic Versioning (Default) 🔄:

    • Fetch the version details of the latest information available from the registry.
    • Download and extract the tarball of the latest version in-memory.
    • Compare the contents of all files from the downloaded tarball with the contents of all files resolved from the bundler:
      • If all files are the same, no new version is needed.
      • If there are any differences, increase the latest version number by one (patch version), generate a new package.json, create a tarball, and publish the new version.
    • If no version is available in the registry, an initial version will be built and published with version 0.0.1 (default but can be changed in the configuration).
  2. Manual Versioning:

    • Provide the exact version number in the configuration.

This explanation provides a comprehensive overview of the bundling and publishing processes in Packtory. Feel free to make any further adjustments or let me know if there's anything specific you'd like to emphasize.

Configuration

The configuration for packtory is an object with the following properties:

  1. registrySettings (Required):

    • An object with at least a required token for authentication.
    • Optionally, you can provide a custom registryUrl for non-default registries.
  2. commonPackageSettings (Optional):

    • Defines settings that can be shared for all packages.
    • Allowed settings: sourcesFolder, mainPackageJson, includeSourceMapFiles, additionalFiles, additionalPackageJsonAttributes.
  3. packages (Required, Array):

    • An array of per-package configurations.

    • Each per-package configuration has the following settings:

    • name (Required, String):

      • Must be unique; the name of the package.
    • sourcesFolder (Required):

      • The absolute path to the base folder of the source files.
      • All other file paths are resolved relative to this path.
    • mainPackageJson (Required):

      • The parsed content of the project's package.json.
      • Needed to obtain version numbers of third-party dependencies.
    • entryPoints (Required, Array of Objects):

      • An array of entry points with the following shape: { js: 'file.js', declarationFile: 'file.d.ts' }.
      • The js property is required, while declarationFile is optional.
    • includeSourceMapFiles (Optional, Boolean, Default: false):

      • If true, the bundler will look for and include source map files in the final package.
    • additionalFiles (Optional, Array of File Descriptions):

      • An array to add additional files to the package that are not automatically resolved.
      • Example: { sourceFilePath: 'LICENSE', targetFilePath: 'LICENSE' }.
      • If defined in both per-package and common settings, they are merged.
    • additionalPackageJsonAttributes (Optional, Object):

      • An object to be merged directly into the generated package.json.
      • Useful for setting meta properties like description or keywords.
      • If defined in both per-package and common settings, they are merged.
    • bundleDependencies (Optional, Array of Strings):

      • An array of package names to mark as dependencies, allowing the bundler to substitute import statements accordingly.
    • bundlePeerDependencies (Optional, Array of Strings):

      • Similar to bundleDependencies but represented as peerDependencies in the generated package.json.

Note: Per-package settings override or merge with common settings when both are defined.

This comprehensive configuration allows fine-tuning for individual packages and provides flexibility in defining dependencies and additional files.

Example Use-Cases

1. Creating CLI Tools

Suppose you have a project with a utility library (image-resizer-lib) and a corresponding CLI tool (image-resizer-cli) with bin entry points. packtory simplifies the bundling and publishing of these packages while ensuring clean and minimal npm packages.

// packtory.config.js
export const config = {
    registrySettings: { token: process.env.NPM_TOKEN },
    commonPackageSettings: {
        sourcesFolder: path.join(process.cwd(), 'dist/'),
        mainPackageJson: fs.readFileSync('./package.json', { encoding: 'utf8' })
    },
    packages: [
        {
            name: 'image-resizer-lib',
            entryPoints: [{ js: 'lib.js' }]
        },
        {
            name: 'image-resizer-cli',
            entryPoints: [{ js: 'cli.js' }],
            bundleDependencies: ['image-resizer-lib']
        }
    ]
};

2. Managing Complex Dependencies

Consider a scenario where you have an ecosystem of packages like awesome-logger, awesome-logger-adapter, and awesome-logger-adapter-awesome-target. packtory simplifies the bundling and publishing process, automatically managing dependencies between these packages.

// packtory.config.js
export const config = {
    registrySettings: { token: process.env.NPM_TOKEN },
    commonPackageSettings: {
        sourcesFolder: path.join(process.cwd(), 'src/'),
        mainPackageJson: fs.readFileSync('./package.json', { encoding: 'utf8' })
    },
    packages: [
        {
            name: 'awesome-logger',
            entryPoints: [{ js: 'index.js' }]
        },
        {
            name: 'awesome-logger-adapter',
            entryPoints: [{ js: 'adapter.js' }],
            bundleDependencies: ['awesome-logger']
        },
        {
            name: 'awesome-logger-adapter-awesome-target',
            entryPoints: [{ js: 'target.js' }],
            bundleDependencies: ['awesome-logger', 'awesome-logger-adapter']
        }
    ]
};

These examples demonstrate how packtory adapts to different project structures and facilitates the efficient bundling and publishing of packages with varying dependencies.