patch-package
lets app authors instantly make and keep fixes to npm
dependencies. It's a vital band-aid for those of us living on the bleeding edge.
vim node_modules/some-package/brokenFile.js
npx patch-package some-package
git add patches/some-package+3.14.15.patch
git commit -m "fix brokenFile.js in some-package"
Patches created by patch-package
are automatically and gracefully applied when
you use npm
(>=5) or yarn
.
No more waiting around for pull requests to be merged and published. No more
forking repos just to fix that one tiny thing preventing your app from working.
Set-up
In package.json
"scripts": {
+ "postinstall": "patch-package"
}
Then
npm
npm i patch-package
You can use --save-dev
if you don't need to run npm in production, e.g. if
you're making a web frontend.
yarn
yarn add patch-package postinstall-postinstall
You can use --dev
if you don't need to run yarn in production, e.g. if you're
making a web frontend.
To understand why yarn needs the postinstall-postinstall
package see:
Why use postinstall-postinstall
yarn workspaces
Same as for yarn ☝️ Note that if you want to patch un-hoisted packages you'll
need to repeat the setup process for the child package. Also make sure you're in
the child package directory when you run patch-package
to generate the patch
files.
Heroku
For patch-package
to work on Heroku applications, you must specify
NPM_CONFIG_PRODUCTION=false
or YARN_PRODUCTION=false
.
See this issue for more
details.
Docker and CI
-
If having errors about working directory ("cannot run in wd [...]") when
building in Docker, you might need to adjust configuration in .npmrc
. See
#185.
-
In your Dockerfile
, remember to copy over the patch files before running
[npm|yarn] install
-
If you cache node_modules
rather than running yarn install
every time,
make sure that the patches
dir is included in your cache key somehow.
Otherwise if you update a patch then the change may not be reflected on
subsequent CI runs.
E.g., for CircleCI: before loading/saving your cache run
cat patches/* | md5 > patches.hash
and then update your hash key to include
a checksum of that file,
{{ checksum "yarn.lock" }}-{{ checksum "patches.hash" }}
.
Usage
Making patches
First make changes to the files of a particular package in your node_modules
folder, then run
yarn patch-package package-name
or use npx (included with npm > 5.2
)
npx patch-package package-name
where package-name
matches the name of the package you made changes to.
If this is the first time you've used patch-package
, it will create a folder
called patches
in the root dir of your app. Inside will be a file called
package-name+0.44.0.patch
or something, which is a diff between normal old
package-name
and your fixed version. Commit this to share the fix with your
team.
Options
-
--create-issue
For packages whose source is hosted on GitHub this option opens a web browser
with a draft issue based on your diff.
-
--use-yarn
By default, patch-package checks whether you use npm or yarn based on which
lockfile you have. If you have both, it uses npm by default. Set this option
to override that default and always use yarn.
-
--exclude <regexp>
Ignore paths matching the regexp when creating patch files. Paths are relative
to the root dir of the package to be patched.
Default value: package\\.json$
-
--include <regexp>
Only consider paths matching the regexp when creating patch files. Paths are
relative to the root dir of the package to be patched.
Default value: .*
-
--case-sensitive-path-filtering
Make regexps used in --include or --exclude filters case-sensitive.
-
--patch-dir
Specify the name for the directory in which to put the patch files.
Nested packages
If you are trying to patch a package at, e.g.
node_modules/package/node_modules/another-package
you can just put a /
between the package names:
npx patch-package package/another-package
It works with scoped packages too
npx patch-package @my/package/@my/other-package
Updating patches
Use exactly the same process as for making patches in the first place, i.e. make
more changes, run patch-package, commit the changes to the patch file.
Applying patches
Run patch-package
without arguments to apply all patches in your project.
Options
-
--error-on-fail
Forces patch-package to exit with code 1 after failing.
When running locally patch-package always exits with 0 by default. This
happens even after failing to apply patches because otherwise yarn.lock and
package.json might get out of sync with node_modules, which can be very
confusing.
--error-on-fail
is switched on by default on CI.
See https://github.com/ds300/patch-package/issues/86 for background.
-
--reverse
Un-applies all patches.
Note that this will fail if the patched files have changed since being
patched. In that case, you'll probably need to re-install node_modules
.
This option was added to help people using CircleCI avoid
an issue around caching and patch file updates
but might be useful in other contexts too.
-
--patch-dir
Specify the name for the directory in which the patch files are located
Notes
To apply patches individually, you may use git
:
git apply --ignore-whitespace patches/package-name+0.44.2.patch
or patch
in unixy environments:
patch -p1 -i patches/package-name+0.44.2.patch
Dev-only patches
If you deploy your package to production (e.g. your package is a server) then
any patched devDependencies
will not be present when patch-package runs in
production. It will happily ignore those patch files if the package to be
patched is listed directly in the devDependencies
of your package.json. If
it's a transitive dependency patch-package can't detect that it is safe to
ignore and will throw an error. To fix this, mark patches for transitive dev
dependencies as dev-only by renaming from, e.g.
package-name+0.44.0.patch
to
package-name+0.44.0.dev.patch
This will allow those patch files to be safely ignored when
NODE_ENV=production
.
Benefits of patching over forking
- Sometimes forks need extra build steps, e.g. with react-native for Android.
Forget that noise.
- Get told in big red letters when the dependency changed and you need to check
that your fix is still valid.
- Keep your patches colocated with the code that depends on them.
- Patches can be reviewed as part of your normal review process, forks probably
can't
When to fork instead
- The change is too consequential to be developed in situ.
- The change would be useful to other people as-is.
- You can afford to make a proper PR to upstream.
Isn't this dangerous?
Nope. The technique is quite robust. Here are some things to keep in mind
though:
- It's easy to forget to run
yarn
or npm
when switching between branches
that do and don't have patch files. - Long lived patches can be costly to maintain if they affect an area of code
that is updated regularly and you want to update the package regularly too.
- Big semantic changes can be hard to review. Keep them small and obvious or add
plenty of comments.
- Changes can also impact the behaviour of other untouched packages. It's
normally obvious when this will happen, and often desired, but be careful
nonetheless.
Why use postinstall-postinstall with Yarn?
Most times when you do a yarn
, yarn add
, yarn remove
, or yarn install
(which is the same as just yarn
) Yarn will completely replace the contents of
your node_modules with freshly unpackaged modules. patch-package uses the
postinstall
hook to modify these fresh modules, so that they behave well
according to your will.
Yarn only runs the postinstall
hook after yarn
and yarn add
, but not after
yarn remove
. The postinstall-postinstall
package is used to make sure your
postinstall
hook gets executed even after a yarn remove
.
License
MIT