View diffs of what you will publish to npm
before you really do!
Publishing a package from a local repository runs the risk of last minute human mistakes like:
- deletions
- mutations
- additions
to the files sent to the npm
registry.
publish-diff
offers the piece of mind that you will publish exactly what you
intend to publish with convenient, git-style diffs against the npm
registry from your local project.
Install this package as a global dependency.
$ npm install -g publish-diff
The basics:
Usage: publish-diff [options]
Preview npm publish changes.
Options:
-V, --version output the version number
-o, --old <package> Old package to diff (default `<package>@latest`)
-n, --new <package> New package to diff (default `process.cwd()`)
-r, --registry <registry> The npm registry to diff the package against
-f, --filter <pattern> File glob patterns to filter to
--no-colors Disable colors in the outputted diff
-h, --help output usage information
Examples:
# Compare (old) npm registry `latest` version vs. (new) local `process.cwd()`
$ publish-diff
# Compare (old) npm version vs. (new) latest npm version
$ publish-diff -o rowdy@0.4.0 -n rowdy@latest
# Compare (old) git tag/hash vs. (new) git tag/hash
$ publish-diff -o FormidableLabs/rowdy#v0.4.0 -n FormidableLabs/rowdy#v0.5.0
# Filter differences to only lib and src directories
$ publish-diff -o radium@0.21.1 -n radium@0.21.2 --filter='{lib,src}/**'
# Filter differences to ignore dist directory
$ publish-diff -o radium@0.21.1 -n radium@0.21.2 --filter='!dist/**'
The most common case is to compare the latest
published version of a
package (old) against the current working directory (new). In this case,
publish-diff
will infer the package's name
from the package.json
file.
$ publish-diff
The script takes -o|--old
and -n|--new
values to determine what to diff.
-n|--new
: Defaults to current working directory (process.cwd()
) in the local filesystem. This assumes the common case of publishing a new version from your machine.-o|--old
: Defaults to thepackage.json:name
of the package extracted from the--new
argument at its latest version in thenpm
registry.
For a package <pkg>
already published to the npm
registry the default case
expands to:
$ publish-diff -o <local cwd> -n <latest npm version>
# Diff local version vs latest on npm registry
$ publish-diff
$ publish-diff -n .
$ publish-diff -o <pkg>@latest -n .
$ publish-diff -o <pkg>@latest
# Diff local version vs tag or old version
$ publish-diff -o <pkg>@beta
$ publish-diff -o <pkg>@1.2.3
# Diff local version vs other local version
$ publish-diff -o /path/to/some-version
$ publish-diff -o /path/to/some-version -n .
$ publish-diff -o /path/to/some-version -n /path/to/other-version
Under the hood, publish-diff
relies on the amazingly flexible
npm pack
to create the "real deal" version
of a package that is already / will be published. This also gives us some extra
flexibility in specifying the old and new packages to compare against as
publish-diff
permits passing the -o
and -n
arguments with any value that
would otherwise be permissible to npm pack
.
This means you can view remote differences across already published versions of packages without needing a local checkout:
$ publish-diff -n <npm name + version>
$ publish-diff -o <npm name + version> -n <npm name + version>
# Diff old version vs. latest on npm registry
$ publish-diff -o rowdy@0.4.0 -n rowdy@latest
$ publish-diff -o radium@0.17.2 -n radium
# Diff two old versions on npm registry
$ publish-diff -o rowdy@0.4.0 -n rowdy@0.5.0
$ publish-diff -o radium@0.17.2 -n radium@0.18.0
And you can do the same with git versions:
# Diff git tag/hash vs latest on npm registry
$ publish-diff -o FormidableLabs/rowdy#v0.4.0 -n rowdy
$ publish-diff -o FormidableLabs/rowdy#504735c -n rowdy@latest
$ publish-diff -o FormidableLabs/rowdy#v0.4.0 -n rowdy@latest
# Diff two old versions from git tag/hash
$ publish-diff -o FormidableLabs/rowdy#v0.4.0 -n FormidableLabs/rowdy#v0.5.0
$ publish-diff -o FormidableLabs/rowdy#504735c -n FormidableLabs/rowdy#fe25a22
Note that when doing local / git-based comparisons that portions of the npm
publish / version lifecycles may be missing and you may need to manually
approximate this (discussed in detail in the next section).
One complexity that comes up frequently is npm
lifecycle events that occur
in publishing that need to be simulated to accurately generate a preview diff.
Specifically, if the following taks is present in a package.json
file, it
will occur before actual publishing:
prepublish
After publishing, the following tasks run if found:
publish
postpublish
If a project uses an npm version
workflow to control versioning of git source
it will invoke the following package.json
tasks if found:
preversion
version
After versioning, the following task is run if found:
postversion
Translating this to publish-diff
, if you want to simulate what will actually
be published, a more accurate command line sequence would be:
$ npm run prepublish && \
publish-diff && \
npm run postpublish
The gotcha here is that if there is a package.json:publish
script it would
not be run and you will need to manually approximate that because running
npm run publish
would actually publish, defeating the point of previewing
your diff.
For a version
workflow, an appropriate command line sequence may look
something like:
$ npm run preversion && \
publish-diff && \
npm run postversion
Similar to publish
, you would not want to run npm run version
because it
has side effects -- in this case, mutating the git state of your project.
Projects with an actual package.json:version
script would need manual cleanup.
publish-diff
follows the npm
rules for searching for .npmrc
files --
https://docs.npmjs.com/files/npmrc#files -- which approximates to:
${process.cwd()}/.npmrc
~/.npmrc
$NODE_GLOBAL_PATH/etc/npmrc
$SYSTEM_PATH/npm/npmrc
publish-diff
shells to npm pack
which will out-of-the-box work with all but
the first of these rc file locations. The complexity is that for the actual
npm pack
command, publish-diff
creates and switches to a temporary
directory. To compensate for this behavior, if a ${process.cwd()}/.npmrc
file
is found, that is also copied to the temporary directory before initiating
any underlying npm
commands.
Stable: Formidable is not planning to develop any new features for this project. We are still responding to bug reports and security concerns. We are still welcoming PRs for this project, but PRs that include new features should be small and easy to integrate and should not include breaking changes.