npm-packlist
Get a list of the files to add from a folder into an npm package.
These can be handed to tar like so to make an npm
package tarball:
const packlist = require('npm-packlist')
const tar = require('tar')
const packageDir = '/path/to/package'
const packageTarball = '/path/to/package.tgz'
packlist({ path: packageDir })
.then(files => tar.create({
prefix: 'package/',
cwd: packageDir,
file: packageTarball,
gzip: true
}, files))
.then(_ => {
})
This uses the following rules:
-
If a package.json
file is found, and it has a files
list,
then ignore everything that isn't in files
. Always include the
readme, license, notice, changes, changelog, and history files, if
they exist, and the package.json file itself.
-
If there's no package.json
file (or it has no files
list), and
there is a .npmignore
file, then ignore all the files in the
.npmignore
file.
-
If there's no package.json
with a files
list, and there's no
.npmignore
file, but there is a .gitignore
file, then ignore
all the files in the .gitignore
file.
-
Everything in the root node_modules
is ignored, unless it's a
bundled dependency. If it IS a bundled dependency, and it's a
symbolic link, then the target of the link is included, not the
symlink itself.
-
Unless they're explicitly included (by being in a files
list, or
a !negated
rule in a relevant .npmignore
or .gitignore
),
always ignore certain common cruft files:
- .npmignore and .gitignore files (their effect is in the package
already, there's no need to include them in the package)
- editor junk like
.*.swp
, ._*
and .*.orig
files .npmrc
files (these may contain private configs)- The
node_modules/.bin
folder - Waf and gyp cruft like
/build/config.gypi
and .lock-wscript
- Darwin's
.DS_Store
files because wtf are those even npm-debug.log
files at the root of a project
You can explicitly re-include any of these with a files
list in
package.json
or a negated ignore file rule.
Only the package.json
file in the very root of the project is ever
inspected for a files
list. Below the top level of the root package,
package.json
is treated as just another file, and no package-specific
semantics are applied.
Interaction between package.json
and .npmignore
rules
For simplicity, it is best to use either a files
list in package.json
or a .npmignore
file, and not both. If you only use one of these
methods, you can skip this documentation section.
The files
list in package.json
is used to direct the exploration of the
tree. In other words, that's all the walker will ever look at when
exploring that level.
In some cases this can lead to a .npmignore
file being ignored. If a
directory is listed in files
, then any rules in a root or nested
.npmignore
files will be honored.
For example, with this package.json:
{
"files": [ "dir" ]
}
a .npmignore
file at dir/.npmignore
(and any subsequent
sub-directories) will be honored. However, a .npmignore
at the root
level will be skipped.
Conversely, with this package.json:
{
"files": ["dir/subdir"]
}
a .npmignore
file at dir/.npmignore
will not be honored.
Any specific file matched by a glob or filename in the package.json files
list will be included, and cannot be excluded by any .npmignore
files in
nested directories, or by a .npmignore
file in the root package
directory, unless that root .npmignore
file is also in the files
list.
The previous (v1) implementation used in npm 6 and below treated
package.json
as a special sort of "reverse ignore" file. That is, it was
parsed and handled as if it was a .npmignore
file with !
prepended to
all of the globs in the files
list. In order to include children of a
directory listed in files
, they would also have /**
appended to them.
This is tricky to explain, but is a significant improvement over the
previous (v1) implementation used in npm 6 and below, with the following
beneficial properties:
- If you have
{"files":["lib"]}
in package.json
, then the walker will
still ignore files such as lib/.DS_Store
and lib/.foo.swp
. The
previous implementation would include these files, as they'd be matched
by the computed !lib/**
ignore rule. - If you have
{"files":["lib/a.js","lib/b.js"]}
in package.json
, and a
lib/.npmignore
containing a.js
, then the walker will still include
the two files indicated in package.json
, and ignore the
lib/.npmignore
file. The previous implementation would mark these
files for inclusion, but then exclude them when it came to the nested
.npmignore
file. (Ignore file semantics dictate that a "closer" ignore
file always takes precedence.) - A file in
lib/pkg-template/package.json
will be included, and its
files
list will not have any bearing on other files being included or
skipped. When treating package.json
as just Yet Another ignore file,
this was not the case, leading to difficulty for modules that aim to
initialize a project.
In general, this walk should work as a reasonable developer would expect.
Matching human expectation is tricky business, and if you find cases where
it violates those expectations, please let us
know.
API
Same API as ignore-walk, just hard-coded
file list and rule sets.
The Walker
and WalkerSync
classes take a bundled
argument, which
is a list of package names to include from node_modules. When calling
the top-level packlist()
and packlist.sync()
functions, this
module calls into npm-bundled
directly.