lpx
v1.0.4
Published
Local Package eXecute
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163
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lpx Local Package eXecute
Execute a command found in local node_modules/.bin folder or from a parent folder.
You can use lpx to
- run a binary found in the local node_modules/.bin folder
- run a binary found in the node_modules/.bin of a workspace root from anywhere in the workspace
- run a binary found in the node_modules/.bin of any parent folder
lpx does not download any package if the binary is not found locally (ie not like npx)
Install
This package must be installed globally
npm install -g lpx
Usage
With this folder structure :
folder1
|- node_modules
|- |- .bin
|- |- |- command1
|- other files in folder1
|- folder2
|- |- node_modules
|- |- |- .bin
|- |- |- |- command2
|- |- folder3
You can execute both command1 and command2 from folder3
cd folder1/folder2/folder3
lpx command1 command1arguments
lpx command2 command2arguments
Real life usage
If you have installed typescript in a local package and want to build your typescript project and its referenced projects in watch mode from the command line you can run lpx tsc -b -w
Exit code
The exit code of the executed command is propagated (ie if command
exits with 99 error code, lpx command
will exit with 99 as well)
Motivations
At Cervval, our packages are organised in a workspace that has a package.json that determines the versions of the build tools we use (tsc, webpack...)
I wanted to be able to use the binaries of these packages from the command line from anywhere in the workspace.
Solutions I tried before :
- Add scripts in each local package.json
Let's say you have scripts : { "tsc" : "tsc" } in your package.json
When doing this, you can run npm run tsc
to use local tsc bin
If you want to add a parameter you need to run npm run tsc -- -b
with --
which I find very unpleasant
Also, you have to put the binaries in all packages scripts which is not optimal
- npx
By using npx, if you are in a workspace sub folder it will download the package from npm registry and not use the locally defined one