Better workflow than npm | yarn link for package authors.
When developing and authoring multiple packages (private or public), you often find yourself in need of using the latest/WIP versions in other projects that you are working on in your local environment without publishing those packages to remote registry. NPM and Yarn address this issue with a similar approach of symlinked packages (npm/yarn link
). Though this may work in many cases, it often brings nasty constraints and problems with dependency resolution, symlink interoperability between file systems, etc.
yalc
acts as very simple local repository for your localy developed packages that you want to share across your local environment.- When you run
yalc publish
in the package directory, it grabs only files that should be published to NPM and puts them in a special global store (located, for example, in~/.yalc
). - When you run
yalc add my-package
in yourproject
it pulls package content into.yalc
in the current folder and injects afile:
/link:
dependency intopackage.json
. Alternatively, you may useyalc link my-package
which will create a symlink to the package content innode_modules
and will not touchpackage.json
(likenpm/yarn link
does). yalc
creates a specialyalc.lock
file in your project (similar toyarn.lock
andpackage.json
) that is used to ensure consistency while performingyalc
's routines.yalc
can be used with projects whereyarn
ornpm
package managers are used for managingpackage.json
dependencies.
Using NPM:
npm i yalc -g
Using Yarn:
yarn global add yalc
-
Run
yalc publish
in your dependency packagemy-package
. -
It will copy all the files that should be published in remote NPM registry, but will not include standard non-code files like
README
,LICENCE
etc. (If you need them included, add!LICENCE
to.npmignore
). -
It will run
preyalc
orprepublish
scripts before, andpostyalc
orpostpublish
after. Use--force
to publish without running scripts. -
NB! Windows users should make sure the
LF
new line symbol is used in published sources; it may be needed for some packages to work correctly (for example,bin
scripts).yalc
won't convert line endings for you (becausenpm
andyarn
won't either). -
While copying package content,
yalc
calculates the hash signature of all files and, by default, adds this signature to the package manifestversion
. You can disable this by using the--no-sig
option.
- Run
yalc add my-package
in your dependent project, which will copy the current version from the store to your project's.yalc
folder and inject afile:.yalc/my-package
dependency intopackage.json
. - You may specify a particular version with
yalc add my-package@version
. This version will be fixed inyalc.lock
and during updates it will not affect newly published versions. - Use the
--link
option to add alink:
dependency instead offile:
. - Use the
--dev
option to add yalc package to dev dependencies.
- As an alternative to
add
, you can use thelink
command which is similar tonpm/yarn link
, except that the symlink source will be not the global link directory but the local.yalc
folder of your project. - After
yalc
copies package content to.yalc
folder it will create a symlink:project/.yalc/my-package ==> project/node_modules/my-package
. It will not touchpackage.json
in this case.
- Run
yalc update my-package
to update the latest version from store. - Run
yalc update
to update all the packages found inyalc.lock
.
- Run
yalc remove my-package
, it will remove package info frompackage.json
andyalc.lock
- Run
yalc remove --all
to remove all packages from project.
NB! Currently, yalc
copies (or links) added/updated package content to the node_modules
folder, but it doesn't execute yarn/npm
install/update commands after this, so dependencies must be updated manually if necessary.
- When you run
yalc add|link|update
, the project's package locations are tracked and saved, soyalc
knows where each package in the store is being used in your local environment. yalc publish --push
will publish your package to the store and propagate all changes to existingyalc
package installations (this will actually doupdate
operation on the location).yalc push
- is a use shortcut command for push operation (which will likely become your primarily used command for publication):force
options istrue
by default, so it won't runpre/post
scripts (may change this with--no-force
flag).
- If you are using
yalc'ed
modules temporary while development, first add.yalc
andyalc.lock
to.gitignore
. - Use
yalc link
, that won't touchpackages.json
- If you use
yalc add
it will changepackage.json
, and adsfile:
/link:
dependencies, if you may want to useyalc check
in the precommit hook which will check package.json foryalc'ed
dependencies and exits with error, if you forgot to remove them.
- You may want to keep shared
yalc'ed
stuff within the projects you are working on and treat it as a part of the project's codebase. This may really simplify management and usage of shared work in progress packages within your projects and help to make things consistent. So, then just do it, keep.yalc
folder andyalc.lock
in git. - Replace it with published versions from remote repository when ready.
- Useful for monorepos (projects with multiple sub-projects/packages):
yalc publish package-dir will perform publish operation in nested
package` folder of current working dir.
- yarn probably shouldn't cache packages resolved with a file path
- "yarn knit": a better "yarn link"
- npm-link-shared
- yarn link does not install package dependencies
- [npm] RFC: file: specifier changes
WTF.