react-scanner
react-scanner
statically analyzes the given code (TypeScript supported) and extracts React components and props usage.
First, it crawls the given directory and compiles a list of files to be scanned. Then, it scans every file and extracts rendered components and their props into a JSON report.
For example, let's say we have the following index.js
file:
import React from "react";
import ReactDOM from "react-dom";
import {
BasisProvider,
defaultTheme,
Container,
Text,
Link as BasisLink,
} from "basis";
function App() {
return (
<BasisProvider theme={defaultTheme}>
<Container margin="4" hasBreakpointWidth>
<Text textStyle="subtitle2">
Want to know how your design system components are being used?
</Text>
<Text margin="4 0 0 0">
Try{" "}
<BasisLink href="https://github.com/moroshko/react-scanner" newTab>
react-scanner
</BasisLink>
</Text>
</Container>
</BasisProvider>
);
}
ReactDOM.render(<App />, document.getElementById("root"));
Running react-scanner
on it will create the following JSON report:
Click to see it
{
"BasisProvider": {
"instances": [
{
"importInfo": {
"imported": "BasisProvider",
"local": "BasisProvider",
"moduleName": "basis"
},
"props": {
"theme": "(Identifier)"
},
"propsSpread": false,
"location": {
"file": "/path/to/index.js",
"start": {
"line": 13,
"column": 5
}
}
}
]
},
"Container": {
"instances": [
{
"importInfo": {
"imported": "Container",
"local": "Container",
"moduleName": "basis"
},
"props": {
"margin": "4",
"hasBreakpointWidth": null
},
"propsSpread": false,
"location": {
"file": "/path/to/index.js",
"start": {
"line": 14,
"column": 7
}
}
}
]
},
"Text": {
"instances": [
{
"importInfo": {
"imported": "Text",
"local": "Text",
"moduleName": "basis"
},
"props": {
"textStyle": "subtitle2"
},
"propsSpread": false,
"location": {
"file": "/path/to/index.js",
"start": {
"line": 15,
"column": 9
}
}
},
{
"importInfo": {
"imported": "Text",
"local": "Text",
"moduleName": "basis"
},
"props": {
"margin": "4 0 0 0"
},
"propsSpread": false,
"location": {
"file": "/path/to/index.js",
"start": {
"line": 18,
"column": 9
}
}
}
]
},
"Link": {
"instances": [
{
"importInfo": {
"imported": "Link",
"local": "BasisLink",
"moduleName": "basis"
},
"props": {
"href": "https://github.com/moroshko/react-scanner",
"newTab": null
},
"propsSpread": false,
"location": {
"file": "/path/to/index.js",
"start": {
"line": 20,
"column": 11
}
}
}
]
}
}
This raw JSON report is used then to generate something that is useful to you. For example, you might want to know:
- How often a cetrain component is used in your design system? (see
count-components
processor) - How often a certain prop in a given component is used? (see
count-components-and-props
processor) - Looking at some prop in a given component, what's the distribution of values used? (e.g. you might consider deprecating a certain value)
Once you have the result you are interested in, you can write it to a file or simply log it to the console.
Installation
npm install --save-dev react-scanner
Usage
npx react-scanner -c /path/to/react-scanner.config.js
Config file
Everything that react-scanner
does is controlled by a config file.
The config file can be located anywhere and it must export an object like this:
module.exports = {
crawlFrom: "./src",
includeSubComponents: true,
importedFrom: "basis",
};
Running react-scanner
with this config would output something like this to the console:
{
"Text": {
"instances": 17,
"props": {
"margin": 6,
"color": 4,
"textStyle": 1
}
},
"Button": {
"instances": 10,
"props": {
"width": 10,
"variant": 5,
"type": 3
}
},
"Footer": {
"instances": 1,
"props": {}
}
}
Here are all the available config options:
Option | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
crawlFrom |
string | The path of the directory to start crawling from. Absolute or relative to the config file location. |
exclude |
array or function | Each array item should be a string or a regex. When crawling, if directory name matches exactly the string item or matches the regex item, it will be excluded from crawling. For more complex scenarios, exclude can be a a function that accepts a directory name and should return true if the directory should be excluded from crawling. |
globs |
array | Only files matching these globs will be scanned. See here for glob syntax. Default: ["**/!(*.test|*.spec).@(js|ts)?(x)"] |
components |
object | Components to report. Omit to report all components. |
includeSubComponents |
boolean | Whether to report subcomponents or not. When false , Footer will be reported, but Footer.Content will not.When true , Footer.Content will be reported, as well as Footer.Content.Legal , etc.Default: false |
importedFrom |
string or regex | Before reporting a component, we'll check if it's imported from a module name matching importedFrom and, only if there is a match, the component will be reported.When omitted, this check is bypassed. |
getComponentName |
function | This function is called to determine the component name to be used in the report based on the import declaration.Default: ({ imported, local, moduleName, importType }) => imported || local |
getPropValue |
function | Customize reporting for non-trivial prop values. See Customizing prop values treatment |
processors |
array | See Processors. Default: ["count-components-and-props"] |
Processors
Scanning the files results in a JSON report. Add processors to tell react-scanner
what to do with this report.
Built-in processors
react-scanner
comes with some ready to use processors.
To use a built-in processor, simply specify its name as a string, e.g.:
processors: ["count-components"]
You can also use a tuple form to pass options to a built-in processor, e.g.:
processors: [
["count-components", { outputTo: "/path/to/my-report.json" }]
]
All the built-in processors support the following options:
Option | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
outputTo |
string | Where to output the result. Absolute or relative to the config file location. When omitted, the result is printed out to the console. |
Here are the built-in processors that react-scanner
comes with:
count-components
Example output:
{
"Text": 10,
"Button": 5,
"Link": 3
}
count-components-and-props
Example output:
{
"Text": {
"instances": 17,
"props": {
"margin": 6,
"color": 4,
"textStyle": 1
}
},
"Button": {
"instances": 10,
"props": {
"width": 10,
"variant": 4,
"type": 2
}
},
"Footer": {
"instances": 1,
"props": {}
}
}
raw-report
Example output:
{
"Text": {
"instances": [
{
"props": {
"textStyle": "subtitle2"
},
"propsSpread": false,
"location": {
"file": "/path/to/file",
"start": {
"line": 9,
"column": 9
}
}
},
{
"props": {
"margin": "4 0 0 0"
},
"propsSpread": false,
"location": {
"file": "/path/to/file",
"start": {
"line": 12,
"column": 9
}
}
}
]
},
"Link": {
"instances": [
{
"props": {
"href": "https://github.com/moroshko/react-scanner",
"newTab": null
},
"propsSpread": false,
"location": {
"file": "/path/to/file",
"start": {
"line": 14,
"column": 11
}
}
}
]
},
"Container": {
"instances": [
{
"props": {
"margin": "4",
"hasBreakpointWidth": null
},
"propsSpread": false,
"location": {
"file": "/path/to/file",
"start": {
"line": 8,
"column": 7
}
}
}
]
}
}
Custom processors
We saw above that built-in processors come in the form of a string or a tuple.
Custom processors are functions, and can be asynchronous!
If the processor function returns a Promise
, it will be awaited before the next processor kicks in. This way, you can use previous processors results in your processor function.
Here is an example of taking the output of the built-in count-components-and-props
processor and sending it to your storage solution.
processors: [
"count-components-and-props",
({ prevResult }) => {
return axios.post("/my/storage/solution", prevResult);
}
]
Processor functions receive an object with the following keys in it:
Key | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
report |
object | The raw JSON report. |
prevResults |
array | Previous processors results. |
prevResult |
any | The last item in prevResults . Just for convenience. |
forEachComponent |
function | Helper function to recursively traverse the raw JSON report. The function you pass in is called for every component in the report, and it gets an object with componentName and component in it. Check the implementation of count-components-and-props for a usage example. |
sortObjectKeysByValue |
function | Helper function that sorts object keys by some function of the value. Check the implementation of count-components-and-props for a usage example. |
output |
function | Helper function that outputs the given data. Its first parameter is the data you want to output. The second parameter is the destination. When the second parameter is omitted, it outputs to the console. To output to the file system, pass an absolute path or a relative path to the config file location. |
Customizing prop values treatment
When a primitive (strings, numbers, booleans, etc...) is passed as a prop value into a component, the raw report will display this literal value. However, when expressions or variables are passed as a prop value into a component, the raw report will display the AST type. In some instances, we may want to see the actual expression that was passed in.
getPropValue
Using the getPropValue
configuration parameter makes this possible.
type IGetPropValue = {
/** The AST node */
node: Node,
componentName: string,
propName: string,
/** Pass the node back into this method for default handling of the prop value */
defaultGetPropValue: (node: Node) => string
}
getPropValue({ node, componentName, propName, defaultGetPropValue }: IGetPropValue): string
Example
If we were building out a design system, and wanted to see all the variations of a style
prop that we passed into an Input
component, we could do something like this:
const escodegen = require("escodegen-wallaby");
getPropValue: ({ node, propName, componentName, defaultGetPropValue }) => {
if (componentName === "Input" && propName === "style") {
if (node.type === "JSXExpressionContainer") {
return escodegen.generate(node.expression);
} else {
return escodegen.generate(node);
}
} else {
return defaultGetPropValue(node);
}
};
License
MIT