
Security News
gem.coop Tests Dependency Cooldowns as Package Ecosystems Move to Slow Down Attacks
gem.coop is testing registry-level dependency cooldowns to limit exposure during the brief window when malicious gems are most likely to spread.
base-resolver
Advanced tools
'base-methods' plugin for resolving and loading globally installed npm modules.
'base-methods' plugin for resolving and loading globally installed npm modules.
Install with npm
$ npm i base-resolver --save
var resolver = require('base-resolver');
In two steps, the following example shows how we would use base-resolver with a custom Generate application that is built on top of [base-methods][].
Step 1: Setup
The following example shows how we might begin creating a basic project generator from [base-methods][]. More specifically, this shows how we might register and cache generators.
var resolver = require('base-resolver');
var Generate = require('base-methods');
// register a "global" plugin, to initialize the `generators`
// object, and decorate a `register` method (as an alternative
// to inheriting base-methods or other more complicated approaches)
Generate.use(function(app) {
app.generators = {};
app.define('register', function(key, config) {
this.generators[key] = config;
return this;
});
});
// register `resolver` as a global plugin
Generate.use(resolver('generate'));
Step 2
Intantiate the custom application we just created, and search for generators!
var generate = new Generate();
// setup a listener that will register generators (
// `config`s) as they're emitted
generate.on('config', function(config) {
console.log('registered:', config.alias);
generate.register(config.alias, config);
});
// find configs!
generate
.resolve('generate-*/generator.js', {
cwd: require('global-modules')
});
.resolve('generate-*/generator.js', {
cwd: process.cwd()
});
Params
patterns {String|Array}: Glob patterns to searchoptions {Object}: Options to pass to matchedreturns {Object}Example
resolver.on('config', function(config) {
// do stuff with "config"
});
resolver
.resolve('generator.js', {cwd: 'foo'})
.resolve('generator.js', {cwd: 'bar'})
.resolve('generator.js', {cwd: 'baz'})
If necessary, this static method will resolve the first instance to be used as the base instance for caching any additional resolved configs.
Params
configfile {String}: The name of the config file, ex: assemblefile.jsmoduleName {String}: The name of the module to lookup, ex: assembleoptions {Object}returns {Object}Example
var Generate = require('generate');
var resolver = require('base-resolver');
var generate = resolver.first('generator.js', 'generate', {
Ctor: Generate,
isModule: function(app) {
return app.isGenerate;
}
});
Install dev dependencies:
$ npm i -d && npm test
Pull requests and stars are always welcome. For bugs and feature requests, please create an issue.
Jon Schlinkert
Copyright © 2015 Jon Schlinkert Released under the MIT license.
This file was generated by verb-cli on December 03, 2015.
FAQs
'base-methods' plugin for resolving and loading globally installed npm modules.
The npm package base-resolver receives a total of 7 weekly downloads. As such, base-resolver popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that base-resolver demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
Did you know?

Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.

Security News
gem.coop is testing registry-level dependency cooldowns to limit exposure during the brief window when malicious gems are most likely to spread.

Security News
Following multiple malicious extension incidents, Open VSX outlines new safeguards designed to catch risky uploads earlier.

Research
/Security News
Threat actors compromised four oorzc Open VSX extensions with more than 22,000 downloads, pushing malicious versions that install a staged loader, evade Russian-locale systems, pull C2 from Solana memos, and steal macOS credentials and wallets.