Skip to content

Commit

Permalink
feat: add init workspaces
Browse files Browse the repository at this point in the history
Add workspaces support to `npm init`

- Refactored `lib/exec.js` into `libnpmexec`
- Updates init-package-json@2.0.3
- Added ability to create a new workspace using the -w config
  • Loading branch information
ruyadorno committed Apr 17, 2021
1 parent a4e7f4e commit 79df9e6
Show file tree
Hide file tree
Showing 27 changed files with 1,289 additions and 418 deletions.
1 change: 1 addition & 0 deletions docs/content/commands/npm-exec.md
Expand Up @@ -291,3 +291,4 @@ project.
* [npm restart](/commands/npm-restart)
* [npm stop](/commands/npm-stop)
* [npm config](/commands/npm-config)
* [npm workspaces](/using-npm/workspaces)
80 changes: 72 additions & 8 deletions docs/content/commands/npm-init.md
Expand Up @@ -8,8 +8,9 @@ description: Create a package.json file

```bash
npm init [--force|-f|--yes|-y|--scope]
npm init <@scope> (same as `npx <@scope>/create`)
npm init [<@scope>/]<name> (same as `npx [<@scope>/]create-<name>`)
npm init <@scope> (same as `npm exec <@scope>/create`)
npm init [<@scope>/]<name> (same as `npm exec [<@scope>/]create-<name>`)
npm init [-w <dir>] [args...]
```

### Description
Expand All @@ -18,19 +19,19 @@ npm init [<@scope>/]<name> (same as `npx [<@scope>/]create-<name>`)
package.

`initializer` in this case is an npm package named `create-<initializer>`,
which will be installed by [`npx`](https://npm.im/npx), and then have its
which will be installed by [`npm-exec`](/commands/npm-exec), and then have its
main bin executed -- presumably creating or updating `package.json` and
running any other initialization-related operations.

The init command is transformed to a corresponding `npx` operation as
The init command is transformed to a corresponding `npm exec` operation as
follows:

* `npm init foo` -> `npx create-foo`
* `npm init @usr/foo` -> `npx @usr/create-foo`
* `npm init @usr` -> `npx @usr/create`
* `npm init foo` -> `npm exec create-foo`
* `npm init @usr/foo` -> `npm exec @usr/create-foo`
* `npm init @usr` -> `npm exec @usr/create`

Any additional options will be passed directly to the command, so `npm init
foo -- --hello` will map to `npx create-foo --hello`.
foo -- --hello` will map to `npm exec -- create-foo --hello`.

If the initializer is omitted (by just calling `npm init`), init will fall
back to legacy init behavior. It will ask you a bunch of questions, and
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -71,6 +72,68 @@ Generate it without having it ask any questions:
$ npm init -y
```

### Workspaces support

It's possible to create a new workspace within your project by using the
`workspace` config option. When using `npm init -w <dir>` the cli will
create the folders and boilerplate expected while also adding a reference
to your project `package.json` `"workspaces": []` property in order to make
sure that new generated **workspace** is properly set up as such.

Given a project with no workspaces, e.g:

```
.
+-- package.json
```

You may generate a new workspace using the legacy init:

```bash
$ npm init -w packages/a
```

That will generate a new folder and `package.json` file, while also updating
your top-level `package.json` to add the reference to this new workspace:

```
.
+-- package.json
`-- packages
`-- a
`-- package.json
```

The workspaces init also supports the `npm init <initializer> -w <dir>`
syntax, following the same set of rules explained earlier in the initial
**Description** section of this page. Similar to the previous example of
creating a new React-based project using
[`create-react-app`](https://npm.im/create-react-app), the following syntax
will make sure to create the new react app as a nested **workspace** within your
project and configure your `package.json` to recognize it as such:

```bash
npm init -w packages/my-react-app react-app .
```

This will make sure to generate your react app as expected, one important
consideration to have in mind is that `npm exec` is going to be run in the
context of the newly created folder for that workspace, and that's the reason
why in this example the initializer uses the initializer name followed with a
dot to represent the current directory in that context, e.g: `react-app .`:

```
.
+-- package.json
`-- packages
+-- a
| `-- package.json
`-- my-react-app
+-- README
+-- package.json
`-- ...
```

### A note on caching

The npm cli utilizes its internal package cache when using the package
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -100,3 +163,4 @@ an error.
* [npm version](/commands/npm-version)
* [npm scope](/using-npm/scope)
* [npm exec](/commands/npm-exec)
* [npm workspaces](/using-npm/workspaces)
1 change: 1 addition & 0 deletions docs/content/commands/npm-run-script.md
Expand Up @@ -204,3 +204,4 @@ project.
* [npm restart](/commands/npm-restart)
* [npm stop](/commands/npm-stop)
* [npm config](/commands/npm-config)
* [npm workspaces](/using-npm/workspaces)

0 comments on commit 79df9e6

Please sign in to comment.