bower-locker
is a node command line tool for providing "pseudo"-locking capability for a project leveraging
bower.
Bower doesn't inherently provide a locking mechanism (see bower/bower#505).
Bower does allow you to specify a specific version or commit for a given dependency, and a way to specify how you would like to resolve any conflicts (i.e., within the resolutions block). This can be effective but it is tedious to do manually to both "lock" the versions, and the "unlock" the versions to get newer updates.
bower-locker
simply automates that process to make it easier to "unlock" and "lock" that bower file. It also provides a way to validate that the files installed after a bower install
match the desired "locked" versions.
bower-locker
reads through all of the subfolders of the bower_components
directory to examine each components .bower.json
where it extracts information pertinent to the release that is currently being used.
It then generates a new bower.json
(saving a copy of the original as bower-locker.bower.json
) where it defines each direct and indirect dependency (i.e., all components currently in the bower_components
directory) with an exact commit id, under the dependencies block and adds an entry for each in the resolutions block in the event that any of them tries to load a conflicting dependency version.
Both the new bower.json
and the original (saved as bower-locker.bower.json
) can then be uploaded to your source code repo.
Anybody pulling down the project, will be able to run bower install
normally and they should get the exact versions of the components previously used. The locked bower.json
also has the nice property of making it easy to see when dependent script versions have changed over the course of commits as the version number and commit id will show being updated. An unlocked bower.json
only shows changes when the version ranges are updated.
To validate that intended versions were installed, run bower-locker validate
. It will again compare the downloaded components with the bower.json
file.
To update the versions used, simply run bower-locker unlock
to return to the original bower.json
. Update the bower config as desired including running bower install
. When done, just run bower-locker lock
again to lock in that new version.
Install the bower-locker
module globally:
npm install bower-locker -g
This will install a global command of bower-locker
.
bower-locker lock
Expects to run from within a folder that contains a bower.json
and a ./bower_components/
folder.
If there is no bower_components
folder yet, just run bower install
first to generate it.
It should save a copy of bower.json
as bower-locker.bower.json
and then change bower.json
to be a "locked" version with an additional "bowerLocker" section.
The "bowerLocker" property object that contains the "lastUpdated" timestamp for when the locked version was generated. It also contains a "versions" property object within "bowerLocker" which records the versions that were locked in as a version number to more easily know what version we are using for each dependency.
Using the -v
flag will output the bower dependency versions that are being locked.
bower-locker unlock
Expects to run from within a folder that contains a bower.json
and a bower-locker.bower.json
.file.
It will check that bower.json
is a locked bower file. If so, it will simply replace bower.json
with bower-locker.bower.json
.
Use this command to unlock the bower file for manual updates and edits. When done updating and editing the bower.json
or the bower_components
folder, run bower-locker lock
to relock it.
bower-locker validate
Expects to run from within a folder that contains a bower.json
and a ./bower_components/
folder.
It will check that bower.json
is a locked bower file. If so, it will check through all bower_components
metadata and compare the components found there with the locked versions within bower.json
.
It will report and new or missing components, and any version differences.
Run validate to make sure that all bower_components
were installed as expected.
bower-locker status
Expects to run from within a folder that contains a bower.json
.
It will report whether or not the bower.json
is a locked bower file, and the time it was locked.
Using the -v
flag will also output the locked bower dependency versions.