Security News
GitHub Removes Malicious Pull Requests Targeting Open Source Repositories
GitHub removed 27 malicious pull requests attempting to inject harmful code across multiple open source repositories, in another round of low-effort attacks.
Wire dependencies to your source code.
Install the module with npm:
$ npm install --save wiredep
Install your bower dependencies (if you haven't already):
$ bower install --save jquery
Insert placeholders in your code where your dependencies will be injected:
<html>
<head>
<!-- bower:css -->
<!-- endbower -->
</head>
<body>
<!-- bower:js -->
<!-- endbower -->
</body>
</html>
Let wiredep
work its magic:
$ node
> require('wiredep')({ src: 'index.html' });
index.html modified.
{ packages:
{ jquery:
{ main: [Object],
type: [Object],
name: 'jquery',
dependencies: {} } },
js: [ 'bower_components/jquery/dist/jquery.js' ] }
<html>
<head>
<!-- bower:css -->
<!-- endbower -->
</head>
<body>
<!-- bower:js -->
<script src="bower_components/jquery/dist/jquery.js"></script>
<!-- endbower -->
</body>
</html>
wiredep works with streams and integrates with gulp.js out of the box:
var wiredep = require('wiredep').stream;
gulp.task('bower', function () {
gulp.src('./src/footer.html')
.pipe(wiredep({
optional: 'configuration',
goes: 'here'
}))
.pipe(gulp.dest('./dest'));
});
See grunt-wiredep
.
You can run wiredep
without manipulating any files.
require('wiredep')();
...returns...
{
js: [
'paths/to/your/js/files.js',
'in/their/order/of/dependency.js'
],
css: [
'paths/to/your/css/files.css'
],
// etc.
}
Install wiredep globally to wire up Bower packages from the terminal.
$ npm install -g wiredep
$ wiredep
Wire Bower dependencies to your source code.
Usage: $ wiredep [options]
Options:
-h, --help # Print usage information
-v, --version # Print the version
-b, --bowerJson # Path to `bower.json`
-d, --directory # Your Bower directory
-e, --exclude # A path to be excluded
-i, --ignorePath # A path to be ignored
-s, --src # Path to your source file
--dependencies # Include Bower `dependencies`
--devDependencies # Include Bower `devDependencies`
--includeSelf # Include top-level bower.json `main` files
--verbose # Print the results of `wiredep`
You may also take advantage of Bower >=1.3.1's hooks, with a .bowerrc
such as:
{
"scripts": {
"postinstall": "wiredep -s path/to/src.html"
}
}
require('wiredep')({
directory: 'the directory of your Bower packages.', // default: '.bowerrc'.directory || bower_components
bowerJson: 'your bower.json file contents.', // default: require('./bower.json')
src: ['filepaths', 'and/even/globs/*.html' 'to take', 'control of.'],
// ----- Advanced Configuration -----
// All of the below settings are for advanced configuration, to
// give your project support for additional file types and more
// control.
//
// Out of the box, wiredep will handle HTML files just fine for
// JavaScript and CSS injection.
cwd: 'path/to/where/we/are/pretending/to/be',
dependencies: true, // default: true
devDependencies: true, // default: false
includeSelf: true, // default: false
exclude: [ /jquery/, 'bower_components/modernizr/modernizr.js' ],
ignorePath: /string or regexp to ignore from the injected filepath/,
overrides: {
// see `Bower Overrides` section below.
//
// This inline object offers another way to define your overrides if
// modifying your project's `bower.json` isn't an option.
},
fileTypes: {
fileExtension: {
block: /match the beginning-to-end of a bower block in this type of file/,
detect: {
typeOfBowerFile: /match the way this type of file is included/
},
replace: {
typeOfBowerFile: '<format for this {{filePath}} to be injected>',
anotherTypeOfBowerFile: function (filePath) {
return '<script class="random-' + Math.random() + '" src="' + filePath + '"></script>';
}
}
},
// defaults:
html: {
block: /(([ \t]*)<!--\s*bower:*(\S*)\s*-->)(\n|\r|.)*?(<!--\s*endbower\s*-->)/gi,
detect: {
js: /<script.*src=['"]([^'"]+)/gi,
css: /<link.*href=['"]([^'"]+)/gi
},
replace: {
js: '<script src="{{filePath}}"></script>',
css: '<link rel="stylesheet" href="{{filePath}}" />'
}
},
jade: {
block: /(([ \t]*)\/\/\s*bower:*(\S*))(\n|\r|.)*?(\/\/\s*endbower)/gi,
detect: {
js: /script\(.*src=['"]([^'"]+)/gi,
css: /link\(.*href=['"]([^'"]+)/gi
},
replace: {
js: 'script(src=\'{{filePath}}\')',
css: 'link(rel=\'stylesheet\', href=\'{{filePath}}\')'
}
},
less: {
block: /(([ \t]*)\/\/\s*bower:*(\S*))(\n|\r|.)*?(\/\/\s*endbower)/gi,
detect: {
css: /@import\s['"](.+css)['"]/gi,
less: /@import\s['"](.+less)['"]/gi
},
replace: {
css: '@import "{{filePath}}";',
less: '@import "{{filePath}}";'
}
},
sass: {
block: /(([ \t]*)\/\/\s*bower:*(\S*))(\n|\r|.)*?(\/\/\s*endbower)/gi,
detect: {
css: /@import\s(.+css)/gi,
sass: /@import\s(.+sass)/gi,
scss: /@import\s(.+scss)/gi
},
replace: {
css: '@import {{filePath}}',
sass: '@import {{filePath}}',
scss: '@import {{filePath}}'
}
},
scss: {
block: /(([ \t]*)\/\/\s*bower:*(\S*))(\n|\r|.)*?(\/\/\s*endbower)/gi,
detect: {
css: /@import\s['"](.+css)['"]/gi,
sass: /@import\s['"](.+sass)['"]/gi,
scss: /@import\s['"](.+scss)['"]/gi
},
replace: {
css: '@import "{{filePath}}";',
sass: '@import "{{filePath}}";',
scss: '@import "{{filePath}}";'
}
},
yaml: {
block: /(([ \t]*)#\s*bower:*(\S*))(\n|\r|.)*?(#\s*endbower)/gi,
detect: {
js: /-\s(.+js)/gi,
css: /-\s(.+css)/gi
},
replace: {
js: '- {{filePath}}',
css: '- {{filePath}}'
}
}
To override a property, or lack of, in one of your dependency's bower.json
file, you may specify an overrides
object in your own bower.json
.
As an example, this is what your bower.json
may look like if you wanted to override package-without-main
's main
file:
{
...
"dependencies": {
"package-without-main": "1.0.0"
},
"overrides": {
"package-without-main": {
"main": "dist/package-without-main.js"
}
}
}
In lieu of a formal styleguide, take care to maintain the existing coding style. Add unit tests for any new or changed functionality. Lint and test your code using npm test
.
Copyright (c) 2014 Stephen Sawchuk. Licensed under the MIT license.
FAQs
Wire Bower dependencies to your source code.
The npm package wiredep receives a total of 35,710 weekly downloads. As such, wiredep popularity was classified as popular.
We found that wiredep demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 4 open source maintainers 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
GitHub removed 27 malicious pull requests attempting to inject harmful code across multiple open source repositories, in another round of low-effort attacks.
Security News
RubyGems.org has added a new "maintainer" role that allows for publishing new versions of gems. This new permission type is aimed at improving security for gem owners and the service overall.
Security News
Node.js will be enforcing stricter semver-major PR policies a month before major releases to enhance stability and ensure reliable release candidates.