Run a command if a file changes via Git hooks. Useful for lock files or build systems to keep dependencies and generated files up to date when changing branches, pulling or commiting.
Inspired by lint-staged
and recommended to be used with husky
.
run-if-changed is functional as-is, but it's still quite basic and rough as it has just been published. So issues, feature requests and pull requests are most welcome!
Install with npm
npm install --save-dev husky @hkdobrev/run-if-changed
"run-if-changed": {
"package-lock.json": "npm install --prefer-offline --no-audit"
}
Install with Yarn
yarn add --dev husky @hkdobrev/run-if-changed
"run-if-changed": {
"yarn.lock": "yarn install --prefer-offline --pure-lockfile --color=always"
}
Using husky
echo "npm run run-if-changed" > .husky/post-commit
echo "npm run run-if-changed" > .husky/post-checkout
echo "npm run run-if-changed" > .husky/post-merge
echo "npm run run-if-changed" > .husky/post-rewrite
Just git hooks
echo "npm run run-if-changed" >> .git/hooks/post-commit && chmod +x .git/hooks/post-commit
echo "npm run run-if-changed" >> .git/hooks/post-checkout && chmod +x .git/hooks/post-checkout
echo "npm run run-if-changed" >> .git/hooks/post-merge && chmod +x .git/hooks/post-merge
echo "npm run run-if-changed" >> .git/hooks/post-rewrite && chmod +x .git/hooks/post-rewrite
The use case for run-if-changed
is mostly for a team working on a project and push and pull code in different branches. When you share dependencies, database migrations or compilable code in the shared Git repository often some commands need to be run when a file or folder gets updated.
Check out the common use cases.
run-if-changed
object in yourpackage.json
.run-if-changedrc
file in JSON or YML formatrun-if-changed.config.js
file in JS format
See cosmiconfig for more details on what formats are supported.
Configuration should be an object where each key is a file or directory match pattern and the value is either a single command or an array of commands to run if the file have changed since the last Git operation.
Supported are any executables installed locally or globally via npm
or Yarn as well as any executable from your $PATH
.
Using globally installed scripts is discouraged, since run-if-changed may not work for someone who doesn't have it installed.
run-if-changed
is using execa
to locate locally installed scripts and run them. So in your .run-if-changedrc
you can just write and it would use the local version:
{
"src": "webpack"
}
Sequences of commands are supported. Pass an array of commands instead of a single one and they will run sequentially.
If you use a dependency manager with a lock file like npm, Yarn, Composer, Bundler or others, you would usually add a dependency and the dependency manager would install it and add it to the lock file in a single run. However, when someone else has updated a dependency and you pull new code or checkout their branch you need to manually run the install command of your dependency manager.
Here's example configuration of run-if-changed
:
npm
package.json
{
"run-if-changed": {
"package-lock.json": "npm install --prefer-offline --no-audit"
}
}
.run-if-changedrc
{
"package-lock.json": "npm install --prefer-offline --no-audit"
}
Yarn
package.json
{
"run-if-changed": {
"yarn.lock": "yarn install --prefer-offline --pure-lockfile --color=always"
}
}
.run-if-changedrc
{
"yarn.lock": "yarn install --prefer-offline --pure-lockfile --color=always"
}
Composer
package.json
{
"run-if-changed": {
"composer.lock": "composer install --ignore-platform-reqs --ansi"
}
}
Bundler
package.json
{
"run-if-changed": {
"Gemfile.lock": "bundle install"
}
}
If you keep database migrations in your repository, you'd usually want to run them when you check out a branch or pull from master.
Example of running Doctrine migrations when pulling or changing branches
package.json
{
"run-if-changed": {
"migrations": "./console db:migrate --allow-no-migration --no-interaction"
}
}
Example for running build on changing src folder when pulling or changing branches
package.json
{
"run-if-changed": {
"src": "npm run build"
}
}