/lerna-tutorial

Simple example of lerna.js

Primary LanguageJavaScript

Lerna tutorial

TLDR;

  • npm install (installs lerna)

  • lerna bootstrap (connects all the packages)

  • npm -C ./packages/usage run start (console logs "alpha" and "beta" from combind use example module)

  • Tree Structure

  • packages

    • alpha (deps: [])
    • beta (deps: [])
    • usage (deps: ["alpha", "beta"])

Summary

First off, What is lerna? Lerna is a tool that allows you to maintain multiple npm packages within one repository.

There's a couple of benefits to this kind of approach, the paradigm is called a monorepo, and more can be read about it from the source of babel, and react.

Here's the gist:

  • Single lint, build, test and release process.
  • Easy to coordinate changes across modules.
  • Single place to report issues.
  • Easier to setup a development environment.
  • Tests across modules are ran together which finds bugs that touch multiple modules easier.

Getting started.

For this demo I'm going to be using lerna. lerna is a CLI (command line interface) tool. You're going to want to install it with the --global (-g) flag.

npm i lerna -g

Then once it's done installing your going to want to run the following

mkdir my-monorepo && cd $_ && lerna init

This will do a couple of things.

  • Creating packages folder.
  • Updating package.json.
  • Creating lerna.json.

The /packages folder is where all of your packages belong. Let's go about making a new package alpha.

cd packages
mkdir alpha
cd alpha
npm init -y
echo "module.exports = 'alpha'" > index.js

Lets go through the same steps for another package beta.

First go up one directory:

cd ..

Now go about creating beta.

mkdir beta
cd beta
npm init -y
echo "module.exports = 'beta'" > index.js

Now we're going to create a usage package that uses both alpha and beta as dependencies.

First go up one directory:

cd ..

Now go about creating \usage.

mkdir usage
cd usage
npm init -y
touch index.js

Open up /packages/usage/index.js in a text editor and paste this in.

var alpha = require("alpha");
var beta = require("beta");
console.log(alpha + " " + beta);

We're almost there. At this point your whole project should look something like this:

.
├── README.md
├── lerna.json
├── package.json
└── packages
    ├── alpha
    │   ├── index.js
    │   └── package.json
    ├── beta
    │   ├── index.js
    │   └── package.json
    └── usage
        ├── index.js
        └── package.json

What you want to do now is go into /packages/usage/package.json and add these lines under dependencies.

{
  "dependencies": {
    "alpha": "1.0.0",
    "beta": "1.0.0"
  }
}

Now you need to wire everything up with this command.

lerna bootstrap

The output from this command should look something like this:

Lerna v2.0.0-beta.20
Linking all dependencies
Successfully bootstrapped 3 packages.

Now using the tree command once more (brew install tree) we can see the folder structure we can see what lerna did.

.
├── README.md
├── lerna.json
├── package.json
└── packages
    ├── alpha
    │   ├── index.js
    │   ├── node_modules
    │   └── package.json
    ├── beta
    │   ├── index.js
    │   ├── node_modules
    │   └── package.json
    └── usage
        ├── index.js
        ├── node_modules
        │   ├── alpha
        │   │   ├── index.js
        │   │   └── package.json
        │   └── beta
        │       ├── index.js
        │       └── package.json
        └── package.json

If list node_modules:

lrwxr-xr-x  1 user  staff   11 Mar  8 18:03 alpha -> ../../alpha
lrwxr-xr-x  1 user  staff   10 Mar  8 18:03 beta -> ../../beta

It added two stubbed (my term not lerna's) modules. If you peak inside /packages/usage/node_modules/alpha/index.js you can see what I mean.

contents of ./packages/usage/node_modules/alpha/index.js

module.exports = require("/Users/thomas/Desktop/lerna-tutorial/packages/alpha");

Note: This is an absolute path to the module. So if you ever move your lerna project you'll need to rerun lerna bootstrap.

And voila! When we run node ./packages/usage/index.js we get our expected output!

alpha beta