
Security News
Attackers Are Hunting High-Impact Node.js Maintainers in a Coordinated Social Engineering Campaign
Multiple high-impact npm maintainers confirm they have been targeted in the same social engineering campaign that compromised Axios.
multi-module-alias
Advanced tools
Create aliases of directories and register custom module paths in NodeJS like a boss!
No more shit-coding paths in Node like so:
require('../../../../some/very/deep/module')
Enough of this madness!
Just create an alias and do it the right way:
var module = require('@deep/module')
// Or ES6
import module from '@deep/module'
It also allows you to register directories that will act just like node_modules but with your own private modules, so that you can access them directly:
require('my_private_module');
// Or ES6
import module from 'my_private_module'
WARNING: This module should not be used in other npm modules since it modifies the default require behavior! It is designed to be used for development of final projects i.e. web-sites, applications etc.
npm i --save module-alias
Add your custom configuration to your package.json (in your application's root)
// Aliases
"_moduleAliases": {
"@root" : ".", // Application's root
"@deep" : "src/some/very/deep/directory/or/file",
"@my_module" : "lib/some-file.js",
"something" : "src/foo", // Or without @. Actually, it could be any string
}
// Custom module directories, just like `node_modules` but with your private modules (optional)
"_moduleDirectories": ["node_modules_custom"],
Then add this line at the very main file of your app, before any code
require('module-alias/register')
And you're all set! Now you can do stuff like:
require('something')
const module = require('@root/some-module')
const veryDeepModule = require('@deep/my-module')
const customModule = require('my_private_module') // module from `node_modules_custom` directory
// Or ES6
import 'something'
import module from '@root/some-module'
import veryDeepModule from '@deep/my-module'
import customModule from 'my_private_module' // module from `node_modules_custom` directory
If you don't want to modify your package.json or you just prefer to set it all up programmatically, then the following methods are available for you:
addAlias('alias', 'target_path') - register a single aliasaddAliases({ 'alias': 'target_path', ... }) - register multiple aliasesaddPath(path) - Register custom modules directory (like node_modules, but with your own modules)Examples:
const moduleAlias = require('module-alias')
//
// Register alias
//
moduleAlias.addAlias('@client', __dirname + '/src/client')
// Or multiple aliases
moduleAlias.addAliases({
'@root' : __dirname,
'@client': __dirname + '/src/client',
...
})
// Custom handler function (starting from v2.1)
moduleAlias.addAlias('@src', (fromPath, request, alias) => {
// fromPath - Full path of the file from which `require` was called
// request - The path (first argument) that was passed into `require`
// alias - The same alias that was passed as first argument to `addAlias` (`@src` in this case)
// Return any custom target path for the `@src` alias depending on arguments
if (fromPath.startsWith(__dirname + '/others')) return __dirname + '/others'
return __dirname + '/src'
})
//
// Register custom modules directory
//
moduleAlias.addPath(__dirname + '/node_modules_custom')
moduleAlias.addPath(__dirname + '/src')
//
// Import settings from a specific package.json
//
moduleAlias(__dirname + '/package.json')
// Or let mudule-alias to figure where your package.json is
// located. By default it will look in the same directory
// where you have your node_modules (application's root)
moduleAlias()
Luckily, WebPack has a built in support for aliases and custom modules directories so it's easy to make it work on the client side as well!
// webpack.config.js
const npm_package = require('./package.json')
module.exports = {
entry: { ... },
resolve: {
root: __dirname,
alias: npm_package._moduleAliases || {},
modules: npm_package._moduleDirectories || [] // eg: ["node_modules", "node_modules_custom", "src"]
}
}
In order to register an alias it modifies the internal Module._resolveFilename method so that when you use require or import it first checks whether the given string starts with one of the registered aliases, if so, it replaces the alias in the string with the target path of the alias.
In order to register a custom modules path (addPath) it modifies the internal Module._nodeModulePaths method so that the given directory then acts like it's the node_modules directory.
FAQs
Create aliases of directories and register custom module paths
We found that multi-module-alias 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
Multiple high-impact npm maintainers confirm they have been targeted in the same social engineering campaign that compromised Axios.

Security News
Axios compromise traced to social engineering, showing how attacks on maintainers can bypass controls and expose the broader software supply chain.

Security News
Node.js has paused its bug bounty program after funding ended, removing payouts for vulnerability reports but keeping its security process unchanged.