Keep your cache clear – as my mom always says.
wipeNodeCache – cleans, clears and wipes all old dirty modules from node.js internal require.cache.
Useful for testing purposes when you need to freshly require a module. Or two.
Or just keep all modules fresh, for example for proxyquire.
Install
$ npm install --save wipe-node-cache
Usage
var i = 0;
module.exports = function () {
return ++i;
};
var wipe = require('wipe-node-cache');
require('./foo')();
require('./foo')();
wipe(null, function(){return true;})
require('./foo')();
But this is simply, and stupid way. We can do it better!
API
wipe(object1, filterCallback, bubbleCallback)
Foreach module in system wipe will call filterCallback with 2 arguments – object1 and moduleName(absolute))
And you shall return true, if you want to wipe this module.
After first pass wipe will enter bubbling stage, and will wipe all modules, which use first ones.
Each time bubbleCallback will be called with 1 argument - moduleName.
And you can decide - purge it, or not.
Examples
(see examples in source)
function resolver(stubs, fileName, module) {
return !fileName.indexOf('node_modules') > 0
}
wipe(null, resolver, function (moduleName) {
return !resolver(null, moduleName);
});
function resolver(stubs, fileName, module) {
var dirname = module ? path.dirname(module) : '';
var requireName = fileName;
if (dirname) {
requireName = fileName.charAt(0) == '.' ? path.normalize(dirname + '/' + fileName) : fileName;
}
for (var i in stubs) {
if (requireName.indexOf(i) > 0) {
return stubs[i];
}
}
}
wipe({
'helpers/*': true,
'App.js': true
}, resolver, function (moduleName) {
return !(moduleName.indexOf('node_modules') > 0) && !(moduleName.indexOf('core') > 0)
});
Related
- proxyquire - Usefull testing tool, but with bad caching politics.