Ember CLI Version Checker
Makes it easier to determine if a compatible version of a given NPM or Bower package is present.
Usage
Example:
You want to provide two different sets of templates, based on the currently running Ember version.
let path = require('path');
let VersionChecker = require('ember-cli-version-checker');
module.exports = {
name: 'awesome-addon',
treeForAddonTemplates(tree) {
let checker = new VersionChecker(this.project);
let dep = checker.for('ember', 'bower');
let baseTemplatesPath = path.join(this.root, 'addon/templates');
if (dep.satisfies('>= 1.13.0')) {
return this.treeGenerator(path.join(baseTemplatesPath, 'current'));
} else {
return this.treeGenerator(path.join(baseTemplatesPath, 'legacy'));
}
}
};
API
Semver Methods (gt, lt, gte, lte, eq, neq, satisfies)
See https://github.com/npm/node-semver#comparison and https://github.com/npm/node-semver#ranges-1 for more info
let VersionChecker = require('ember-cli-version-checker');
module.exports = {
name: 'awesome-addon',
init() {
this._super.init.apply(this, arguments);
let checker = new VersionChecker(this.project);
let dep = checker.for('ember-cli');
if (dep.gte('2.0.0')) {
} else {
};
}
};
assertAbove
Throws an error with the given message if a minimum version isn't met.
let VersionChecker = require('ember-cli-version-checker');
module.exports = {
name: 'awesome-addon',
init() {
this._super.init.apply(this, arguments);
let checker = new VersionChecker(this.project);
checker.for('ember-cli').assertAbove('2.0.0');
}
};
You can also provide a specific message as the third argument to assertAbove
if you'd like to customize the output.
let VersionChecker = require('ember-cli-version-checker');
module.exports = {
name: 'awesome-addon',
init() {
this._super.init.apply(this, arguments);
let checker = new VersionChecker(this.project);
checker.for('ember-cli').assertAbove('2.0.0', 'To use awesome-addon you must have ember-cli 2.0.0');
}
};
isAbove
Returns true
if the packages version is above the specified comparison range.
let VersionChecker = require('ember-cli-version-checker');
module.exports = {
name: 'awesome-addon',
init() {
this._super.init.apply(this, arguments);
let checker = new VersionChecker(this.project);
let dep = checker.for('ember-cli');
if (dep.isAbove('2.0.0')) {
} else {
};
}
};
exists
Returns true
or false
indicating if the dependency exists (at any version).
let VersionChecker = require('ember-cli-version-checker');
module.exports = {
name: 'awesome-addon',
init() {
this._super.init.apply(this, arguments);
let checker = new VersionChecker(this.project);
let dep = checker.for('ember-cli-qunit');
if (dep.exists()) {
};
}
};
version
A property that returns the version for the dependency, if the dependency is not found
undefined
will be returned.
let VersionChecker = require('ember-cli-version-checker');
module.exports = {
name: 'awesome-addon',
init() {
this._super.init.apply(this, arguments);
let checker = new VersionChecker(this.project);
let dep = checker.for('ember-cli-qunit');
}
};
hasSingleImplementation
Returns true
if there is only single implementation in node_modules of the
addon. It can either be at app top-level or as a nested dependency. This API
does not work with non-addon npm dependency.
A unique addon can still be included multiple times if it's a nested
dependency, but they are guaranteed to be resolved to same version in
node_modules. This happens when the dependency in problem specifies a valid
version range or the app uses yarn
resolutions.
This is useful if the app wants to make sure there's no unexpected assets from
the addon on being included but still alow the addon being included in the
hierarchy's build process.
const VersionChecker = require('ember-cli-version-checker');
module.exports = {
name: 'awesome-addon',
included() {
this._super.included.apply(this, arguments);
let checker = VersionChecker.forProject(this.project);
if (checker.hasSingleImplementation('<my-addon>')) {
}
}
};
assertSingleImplementation
Throws an error if the addon isn't unique, and receives an optional message
param to customize the error message.
const VersionChecker = require('ember-cli-version-checker');
module.exports = {
name: 'awesome-addon',
included() {
this._super.included.apply(this, arguments);
let checker = VersionChecker.forProject(this.project);
checker.assertSingleImplementation('<my-addon>', 'Please make sure <my-addon> has only one implementation, please correct and here is a helpful message!');
}
};
filterAddonsByName
Find all addon instances with the same name
const VersionChecker = require('ember-cli-version-checker');
module.exports = {
name: 'awesome-addon',
included() {
this._super.included.apply(this, arguments);
let checker = VersionChecker.forProject(this.project);
checker.filterAddonsByName('<my-addon>');
}
};
allAddons
An iterator which gives access to all addon instances
const VersionChecker = require('ember-cli-version-checker');
module.exports = {
name: 'awesome-addon',
included() {
this._super.included.apply(this, arguments);
let checker = VersionChecker.forProject(this.project);
for (let { name, root } = checker.allAddons()) {
}
}
};
check
A utility to verify that addons are installed at appropriate versions. npm
and yarn
resolve conflicting transitive dependency requirements by installing
multiple versions. They do not include a mechanism for packages to declare
that a dependency must be unique. This is, however, a practical constraint
when building Ember applications (for example, we would not want to build an
application that shipped two versions of Ember Data). Related discussion on npm
Every addon in the ember ecosystem implicitly depends on ember-source
, and
most likely a specific version range. If that dependency is specified as a
package.json
dependency, a mismatch between application and addon would
result in duplicating ember-source
. Instead of failing the build, we would
build an application with an unknown version of ember-source
, subverting the
point of specifying dependency version ranges in the first place! The check
API provides a mechanism to avoid this and fail fast in the build step, instead
of building an invalid application with harder to debug runtime errors.
For example, as of today ember-data
supports ember-source
>= 3.4.8
, if it
where to use this addon, it could specify this constraint and provide good
error messages to users.
const VersionChecker = require('ember-cli-version-checker');
module.exports = {
name: 'awesome-addon',
included() {
this._super.included.apply(this, arguments);
const checker = VersionChecker.forProject(this.project);
const check = checker.check({
'ember-source': '>= 3.4.8'
});
check.assert('[awesome-addon] dependency check failed');
if (!check.isSatisfied) {
const altCheck = checker.check({
'magical-polyfil': '>= 1.0.0',
'ember-source': '>= 3.0.0'
})
check.assert('[awesome-addon] dependency check failed:');
}
}
};
Note
How does the version resolution works?
When creating VersionChecker(addonOrAppOrProject)
, the param needs to have a root
property for the VersionChecker to perform node's
module resolution.
Should I use project or parent?
The two primary options that are valid are:
new VersionChecker(this.project)
new VersionChecker(this.parent)
Which one to use depends on if the addon is trying to find a known top-level library or its parent's.
For example, you may want to check this.project
root path to find ember-cli
or ember-source
,
which are expected to be top-level.
Or you may want to check your parent's specific dependency that affects your addon's behavior, you should create
from this.parent
.
If you create via new VersionChecker(this)
in an addon, it will resolve from your addon's path and have your
own dependency's version instead of top-level dependency's if exists. This will result in unreliable result.