Checks if currently installed npm/bower dependencies are installed in the exact same versions that are specified in package.json/bower.json
To install the package and add it to your package.json
, invoke:
npm install check-dependencies --save-dev
When dependencies are changed in package.json
(or bower.json
), whether it's a version bump or a new package, one can forget to invoke npm install
(or bower install
) and continue using the application, possibly encountering errors caused by obsolete package versions. To avoid it, use the check-dependencies
module at the top of the entry point of your application; it will inform about not up-to-date setup and optionally install the dependencies.
Another option would be to always invoke npm install
(or bower install
) at the top of the main file but it can be slow and check-dependencies
is fast.
Once the package has been installed, it may be used via:
$ check-dependencies
All options from the API except log
and error
can be passed to the CLI, example:
$ check-dependencies --verbose --package-manager bower --scope-list dependencies
Options accepting array values in the API (like scopeList
) should have each value passed individually, example:
$ check-dependencies --scope-list dependencies --scope-list devDependencies
require('check-dependencies')(config, callback);
where callback
is invoked upon completion and config
is a configuration object.
callback
is invoked with the object containing fields:
{
status: number, // 0 if successful, 1 otherwise
depsWereOk: boolean, // true if dependencies were already satisfied
log: array, // array of logged messages
error: array, // array of logged errors
}
The function returns a promise so passing a callback is not necessary; instead you can do:
require('check-dependencies')(config)
.then(function (output) {
/* handle output */
});
The promise should never fail.
There is a synchronous alternative -- the following code:
var output = require('check-dependencies').sync(config);
will assign to output
the same object that would otherwise be passed to the callback
in the asynchronous scenario.
The config
object may have the following fields:
Package manager to check against. Possible values: 'npm'
, 'bower'
. (Note: for bower
you need to have the bower
package installed either globally or locally in the same project in which you use check-dependencies
).
Type: string
Default: 'npm'
Path to the directory containing package.json
or bower.json
.
Type: string
Default: the closest directory containing package.json
or bower.json
(depending on packageManager
specified) when going up the tree, starting from the current one
Ensures all installed dependencies are specified in package.json
or bower.json
.
NOTE: Don't use this option with npm 3.0.0 or newer as it deduplicates the file dependency tree by default so check-dependencies
will think many modules are excessive whereas in fact they will not.
Type: boolean
Default: false
Installs packages if they don't match. With the onlySpecified
option enabled prune excessive packages as well.
Type: boolean
Default: false
The list of keys in package.json
or bower.json
where to look for package names & versions.
Type: array
Default: ['dependencies', 'devDependencies']
The list of keys in package.json
or bower.json
where to look for optional package names & versions. An optional package is not required to be installed but if it's installed, it's supposed to match the specified version range.
This list is also consulted when using onlySpecified: true
.
Type: array
Default: ['optionalDependencies']
By default, check-dependencies will skip version check for custom package names, but will still check to see if they are installed. For example:
"dependencies": {
"specialSemver059": "semver#0.5.9"
}
If checkCustomPackageNames is enabled, check-dependencies will parse the version number (after the hash) for custom package names and check it against the version of the installed package of the same name.
Type: boolean
Default: false
By default, check-dependencies will skip version check for packages whose version contains the full repository path. For example:
"dependencies": {
"semver": "https://github.com/npm/node-semver.git#0.5.9"
}
If checkGitUrls is enabled, check-dependencies will parse the version number (after the path to the git repository and the hash) and check it against the version of the installed package.
Type: boolean
Default: false
Prints messages to the console.
Type: boolean
Default: false
A function logging debug messages (applies only if verbose: true
).
Type: function
Default: console.log.bind(console)
A function logging error messages (applies only if verbose: true
).
Type: function
Default: console.error.bind(console)
The most basic usage:
require('check-dependencies')(callback);
This will check packages' versions and report an error to callback
if packages' versions are mismatched.
The following:
require('check-dependencies')({
install: true,
verbose: true,
}, callback);
will install mismatched ones and call callback
.
The following two examples:
require('check-dependencies')(callback);
require('check-dependencies')({}, callback);
behave in the same way - callback
is invoked upon completion; if there was an error, it's passed as a parameter to callback
.
This project aims to support all supported Node.js LTS versions (see LTS README for more details) as well as the latest stable Node.js.
In lieu of a formal styleguide, take care to maintain the existing coding style. Add unit tests for any new or changed functionality. Lint and test your code using npm test
.
Copyright (c) Michał Gołębiowski-Owczarek. Licensed under the MIT license.