package-preview
Creates a production preview of a package
How many times have you published version 1.0.0
of your new fancy package and it didn't work when you installed it as a dependency?
This is because what you test locally is not what gets published to the npm registry.
With package-preview
you'll always test exactly the same version of the package that is going to be installed as a dependency.
Background
There are many ways a package can work locally but break after it's been published.
- a file needed by the package is not added to the files field of
package.json
. - prod dependencies are accidentally installed as dev dependencies
- packages are required in code but not declared in
package.json
- installation lifecycle scripts fail
- bins are incorrectly declared
- the main file is not specified correctly
These issues are mostly missed during development and testing because the content of the local package differs from the one
that is packed and published. package-preview
packs your project and installs it the way it's going to be installed
as a dependency, so you can test the exact same package content that is going to be installed by Node.js package managers.
However, some issues can be missed even when a package is published. From version 3, npm creates a flat node_modules
structure,
as a result, your project has access to packages that are not declared in its package.json
. Luckily, there is an alternative
package manager which is more strict - pnpm. pnpm
creates a strict, nested node_modules
structure
and package-preview
uses it for installing dependencies for the preview.
You can read more about pnpm's strictness and how it helps to avoid silly bugs in this article.
Install
Install package-preview
:
npm add -D package-preview
# or
pnpm add -D package-preview
package-preview
uses pnpm for installing dependencies for the preview.
If you don't have it installed, package-preview
will use the pnpm which comes bundled with it. Though you can also install your own pnpm version globally.
Usage
Lets' say your package is called awesome
. In its package.json
, run preview
before running your tests:
{
"name": "awesome",
"version": "1.0.0",
"scripts": {
"test": "preview && tape test.js"
}
}
package-preview
is going to create the preview version of your package and link it into your project's node_modules
.
So in your tests, you can require awesome
and test the production version of your package:
// Instead of require('.')
const awesome = require('awesome')
assert(awesome() === 'Awesome stuff!')
Pro tips
Frequently packages run their tests before publish:
{
"scripts": {
"prepublishOnly": "npm test"
}
}
However, if package-preview
is executed before tests, it will result in an infinite loop:
publish -> prepublishOnly -> npm test -> package-preview -> publish
To avoid this loop, use package-preview
with the --skip-prepublishOnly
flag:
{
"scripts": {
"test": "preview --skip-prepublishOnly && tape test.js",
"prepublishOnly": "npm test"
}
}
There are similar flags for skipping other lifecycle events: --skip-prepublish
, --skip-prepare
, --skip-prepack
.
CLI
Usage: preview [what] [where] {OPTIONS}
Options:
--skip-prepublish Skips running `prepublish` script before publishing preview
--skip-prepare Skips running `prepare` script before publishing preview
--skip-prepublishOnly Skips running `prepublishOnly` script before publishing preview
--skip-prepack Skips running `prepack` script before publishing preview