dmn
Because I don't need your tests in my production!
Packages in npm
are bloated with stuff which you will never ever use, like build files and different kinds of test data. Guys from npm
provided us with .npmignore
files, but seems like almost no one uses it. Please, stop publishing your development stuff to npm
. If I would like to run your tests and start hacking on your project I will do git clone
not npm install
. Once our project has increased in size in 13Mb and this is just because of single test data file which was used by one of our dependencies (true story). Poor testing farm...
So:
- If you spread installed packages across multiple machines in your environment then bloated dependencies make you unhappy.
- If you get your local repo synced (e.g using Dropbox or Google Drive) then bloated dependencies make you unhappy (it takes so goddamn long to sync a big amount of smal useless files).
- If you distribute your project to end-user not via
npm
then bloated dependencies make you unhappy. - If you are a good person who cares about others then bloated dependencies make you unhappy. Just imagine how much useless stuff which will never be used by anyone is fetched, served and stored by
npm
and e.g.TravisCI
. Imagine how thousands of small useless files impacts installation time of your package.
dmn ("dependency minifier" or "damn missing .npmignore" or "dmn is a meaningless name") - is a command line tool which will help you deal with bloated dependencies. It can clean your node_modules
from stuff which you will never need. And it can gracefully generate .npmignore
file for your project. Both operations are based on list of ignore targets. Send me a pull request If I missed something in this list.
Install
$ npm install -g dmn
Usage
Usage: dmn <command(s)> [options]
Commands:
gen : generate (or add items to existing) .npmignore file
To keep item in release package just prepend it's
pattern with '!'.
clean : clean project's node_modules from useless clutter
Options:
-f, -force : don't ask for command confirmation
-l, -list : list files that will be deleted by "clean" command
Examples
Generate .npmignore for your project:
$ cd <to_your_project>
$ dmn gen --f
Or do this before publishing:
$ dmn gen --f && npm publish
Or even better:
$ dmn gen --f && git add .npmignore && git commit ...
Clean your project's dependencies:
$ cd <to_your_project>
$ dmn clean --f
Clean newly installed dependency:
$ npm install --save <new_dependency> && dmn clean --f
Install dependencies then clean them for cloned repo:
$ git clone https://github.com/<username>/<reponame>
$ cd <reponame> && npm install && dmn clean --f
Questions or suggestions?
If you have any questions, please feel free to create an issue here on github.