New Case Study:See how Anthropic automated 95% of dependency reviews with Socket.Learn More
Socket
Sign inDemoInstall
Socket

flacon

Package Overview
Dependencies
Maintainers
1
Versions
7
Alerts
File Explorer

Advanced tools

Socket logo

Install Socket

Detect and block malicious and high-risk dependencies

Install

flacon

A hyperminimal dependency injection framework.

  • 0.3.0
  • Source
  • npm
  • Socket score

Version published
Weekly downloads
70
decreased by-48.15%
Maintainers
1
Weekly downloads
 
Created
Source

flacon

flacon is a dependency injection container with a clean and tiny API. It helps you to test your components individually.

build status dependency status dev dependency status

Installing

npm install flacon

Introduction

Imagine you have a service foo.js.

module.exports = {
	value: function () { return 'foo' }
};

Now you want another service bar.js that uses foo.js.

var foo = require('./foo');

module.exports = {
	value: function () { return foo.value() + 'bar' }
};

This looks all good. But when testing bar.js, mocking foo.js is really difficult because it is a private dependency. flacon, on the other hand, forces you to explicitly declare all dependencies, making it easy to mock them.

publish

First, we create a new flacon container in container.js.

var Flacon = require('flacon');

module.exports = new Flacon();

You can do two things with a container: publish a module and load a module.

Let's publish foo first. We call the publish method with an id and a factory function.

var container = require('./container');

container.publish('foo', function () {
	return {
		value: function () { return 'foo' }
	};
});

Moving on to bar, we define foo as a dependency. All dependencies get passed into the factory function.

var container = require('./container');

container.publish('bar', ['foo'], function (foo) {
	return {
		value: function () { return foo.value() + ' bar' }
	};
});

load

By simply calling the container with a module id, you will get the return value of the factory function.

var container = require('./container');

var bar = container('bar');
bar.value(); // -> 'foo bar'

During testing, we can easily manipulate or mock a dependency.

var container = require('./container');

var bar = container('bar', {
	'a': function (a) {
		a.value = function () { return 'baz' }
		return a;
	}
});
bar.value(); // -> 'baz bar'

flush

To force flacon to call a module's factory again, use flush.

container.load('a');  // factory creates module
container.flush('a');
container.load('a');  // factory creates module again

Contributing

If you have a question, found a bug or want to propose a feature, have a look at the issues page.

Keywords

FAQs

Package last updated on 21 Jan 2016

Did you know?

Socket

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.

Install

Related posts

SocketSocket SOC 2 Logo

Product

  • Package Alerts
  • Integrations
  • Docs
  • Pricing
  • FAQ
  • Roadmap
  • Changelog

Packages

npm

Stay in touch

Get open source security insights delivered straight into your inbox.


  • Terms
  • Privacy
  • Security

Made with ⚡️ by Socket Inc