npm package discovery and stats viewer.

Discover Tips

  • General search

    [free text search, go nuts!]

  • Package details

    pkg:[package-name]

  • User packages

    @[username]

Sponsor

Optimize Toolset

I’ve always been into building performant and accessible sites, but lately I’ve been taking it extremely seriously. So much so that I’ve been building a tool to help me optimize and monitor the sites that I build to make sure that I’m making an attempt to offer the best experience to those who visit them. If you’re into performant, accessible and SEO friendly sites, you might like it too! You can check it out at Optimize Toolset.

About

Hi, 👋, I’m Ryan Hefner  and I built this site for me, and you! The goal of this site was to provide an easy way for me to check the stats on my npm packages, both for prioritizing issues and updates, and to give me a little kick in the pants to keep up on stuff.

As I was building it, I realized that I was actually using the tool to build the tool, and figured I might as well put this out there and hopefully others will find it to be a fast and useful way to search and browse npm packages as I have.

If you’re interested in other things I’m working on, follow me on Twitter or check out the open source projects I’ve been publishing on GitHub.

I am also working on a Twitter bot for this site to tweet the most popular, newest, random packages from npm. Please follow that account now and it will start sending out packages soon–ish.

Open Software & Tools

This site wouldn’t be possible without the immense generosity and tireless efforts from the people who make contributions to the world and share their work via open source initiatives. Thank you 🙏

© 2024 – Pkg Stats / Ryan Hefner

module-invalidate-2

v1.0.0

Published

allows you to invalidate a given module (or all modules) and make it automatically reloaded on further access, no need to call `require()` again.

Downloads

9

Readme

module-invalidate-2

Invalidate node.js modules loaded through require() It's a fork from module-invalidate No need to write the flag module.envalidable = true.

Please stop to use this module. It's buggy. It breakes modules at running process of downloading!!!!

NPM version NPM Downloads

module-invalidate-2

Invalidate node.js modules loaded through require()

Description

module-invalidate-2 allows you to invalidate a given module (or all modules) and make it automatically reloaded on further access, no need to call require() again.

Install

npm install --save module-invalidate-2

Examples

Example: simple case
module ./myModule.js
// module.invalidable = true;

var count = 0;
exports.count = function() {

	return count++;
}
main module ./index.js
require('module-invalidate-2');

var myModule = require('./myModule.js');

console.log( myModule.count() ); // 0
console.log( myModule.count() ); // 1

module.constructor.invalidateByExports(myModule);

console.log( myModule.count() ); // 0
console.log( myModule.count() ); // 1
Example: invalidate module on modification
const fs = require('fs');

var myModule = require('./myModule.js');

fs.watch(require.resolve('./myModule.js'), function() {
	
	module.invalidateByPath('./myModule.js');
});

setInterval(function() {
	
	console.log(myModule.count());
}, 1000);
Example:
require('module-invalidate-2');

var tmp_modulePath = require('path').join(__dirname, 'tmp_module.js');

require('fs').writeFileSync(tmp_modulePath, `
	// module.invalidable = true;
	exports.a = 1;
`);


var tmp_module = require('./tmp_module.js');

console.log(tmp_module.a); // 1


require('fs').writeFileSync(tmp_modulePath, `
	// module.invalidable = true;
	exports.a = 2;
`);

module.constructor.invalidateByExports(tmp_module);

console.log(tmp_module.a); // 2


require('fs').unlinkSync(tmp_modulePath);

API

In the following API, Module refers to the Module constructor, available with module.constructor or require('Module').
And module refers to a module instance, available in each module with module.

require('module-invalidate-2')

Enable the module-invalidate mechanism.
Any nodejs-non-internal module loaded after this call can be handled by this library.

~~module.invalidable~~

~~This property controls whether the module can be invalidated. By default, modules are not invalidable.~~

Example:
module ./myModule.js
// module.invalidable = true;
module.exports = {
	foo: function() {}
}

module.invalidateByPath(path)

Invalidates the specified module by its path (same syntax and context than require()). ~~The module should have been flagged as invalidable using module.invalidable.~~

Example:
require('module-invalidate-2');
var myModule = require('./myModule.js');
module.invalidateByPath('./myModule.js');

Module.invalidateByExports(exports)

Invalidates the module by giving its exported object. ~~The module should have been flagged as invalidable using module.invalidable.~~

Example:
require('module-invalidate-2');
var myModule = require('./myModule.js');
module.constructor.invalidateByExports(myModule);

invalidateByExports() only invalidates one module.

module B.js
	// module.invalidable = true;
	console.log('load B');
	module.exports = {
		foo: 123
	}
module A.js
	// module.invalidable = true;
	console.log('load A');
	module.exports = require('./B.js');
main module index.js
	require('module-invalidate-2');
	var a = require('./A.js');
	console.log('invalidate');
	module.constructor.invalidateByExports(a);
	var tmp = a.foo;

output:

load A
load B
invalidate
load A

Module.invalidate()

Invalidates all nodejs-non-internal modules. ~~Only process modules that have been flagged as invalidable using module.invalidable.~~

Example:
require('module-invalidate-2');
module.constructor.invalidate();

module.invalidate()

Invalidates the module module. ~~The module should have been flagged as invalidable using module.invalidable.~~

Example:
module.invalidate();

module.unload()

Definitely unloads the module module.

module.unloadByPath(path)

Definitely unloads the module by its path (same syntax and context than require()).

Module.unloadByExports(exports)

Definitely unloads the module by giving its exported object.

module.onInvalidate(callback)

callback: function(immutable_exports)

Register a callback that will be called when the module is invalidated. The immutable_exports is a permanent reference to the current module.exports.
onInvalidate returns a function that unregisters the callback.

Gives you the opportunity to free resources created in the module.
eg. temporary files, timers, web routes, ...

The callback can return function that is called after the module is reloaded. This can help you restore your module state.

Example:
// module.invalidable = true;
this.connectedUsers = [];
exports.connectUser = function(name) {
	
	this.connectedUsers.push(name);
}

exports.getConnectedUsers = function() {
	
	return this.connectedUsers;
}

module.onInvalidate(function(oldExports) {

	return function(newExports) {
		
		newExports.connectedUsers = oldExports.connectedUsers;
	}
});

How it works

  1. Module.prototype.exports is overridden by a No-op forwarding ES6 Proxy that handle all accesses to module exports.
  2. When a module is invalidated, it is marked as invalidated and is then reloaded on the next access (lazily).

Caveat

typeof module.exports is always 'function'

Because the library is unable to know in advance what type of value will be assigned to module.export, it choose the most generic one as ES6 Proxy target. However, (function(){}) instanceof Object === true

Only direct variable access is handled

Example:
var foo = require('foo.js');
var bar = foo.bar;

In this case, bar will always refers to the initial foo.bar value. To avoid this, always refer bar using foo.bar.

Invalidated modules will survive with the new child-module version

In a module, module.exports will always refers to the latest version of the module.

Example:
module ./child.js
// module.invalidable = true;
module.exports = {};

setInterval(function() {
	console.log(module.exports.foo);
}, 1000);
main module index.js
require('module-invalidate-2');

var child = require('./child.js');
child.foo = 1;
module.constructor.invalidateByExports(child);
child.foo = 2;
output
2
2
2
2
2
...

Projects

module-invalidate-2 works in the module hotreloader

Credits

Franck Freiburger