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check-engine's Introduction

check-engine Build Status

A utility to check your package.json engines in Node.js projects. Inspired by the Thali Project in validateBuildEnvironment.js

About

Why

For projects of all sizes, but especially for mid to large size teams, environments get out of sync. Even slight variations in these build / development environments can kill productivity.

What This Does

Validates your system to make sure you have the correct system tools and dependencies installed. Uses the engine object from a package.json located in the current or specified directory to determine what system dependencies or installed tools validate.

Supported Dependencies

Currently Supporting:

Dependencies Semantic Versioning
OS X (MacOS)
Node.js
npm
jx (JXCore)
cordova
appium
ios-deploy
ios-sim
bower
ios-webkit-debug-proxy
ideviceinstaller
java
ant
git
gulp-cli
cocoapods
xcodebuild
carthage
xcpretty
libimobiledevice
deviceconsole
check-engine
yarn
nsp

See the validatorRules.js file file for the full list of things that are supported.

Some dependencies support engines with Semantic Versioning.

Install

check-engine can be installed globally or in a local directory.

  • Globally: npm install -g check-engine
  • Local: npm install check-engine

Usage

CLI

Simply run:

check-engine [path_to_package.json]

Where:

  • path_to_package.json is an optional path to a package.json file containing a list of engines to validate. If omitted, a package.json file will be looked for in the current working directory.

Note: If check-engine is installed locally and you are not running it as part of an npm script, you will have to specify the path to the check-engine executable, which will be ./node_modules/.bin/check-engine. Specifying this path is not necessary within npm scripts, because npm automatically puts the ./node_modules/.bin folder into the environment's PATH.

Programmatic

var checkEngine = require('check-engine');

checkEngine('<path to package.json>').then((result) => {
    if (result.status !== 0) {
        console.log('it failed!');
    } else {
        console.log('it worked!');
    }
}

The result object contains higher level status, as well as information for individual packages that were validated. The above example only shows the high level. The object structure for the result object is as follows:

{
    status: 0 if successful, -1 otherwise
    message: {
        text: 'overall error description'
        type: 'error' or 'success'
    },
    packages: [
        {
            name: 'name of package',
            type: 'error', 'success', or 'warn',
            validatorFound: true or false,
            expectedVersion: 'version listed in package.json for this package', // exists only if validatorFound is true
            commandError: 'error result from validator process execution', // exists only if error occurred
            foundVersion: 'version number found' // exists only if validatorFound is true and there was no commandError error
        }
    ]
}

For example usage of this, see check-engine.js.

Developing check-engine

Building and Testing

  1. Fork and clone repo then cd check-engine.
  2. Install ESLint: npm i -g eslint.
  3. Make changes.
  4. Run npm run lint.
  5. Run npm test.
  6. Push and send a PR.

Publishing to NPM

  1. Update the version by calling npm version [major, minor, or patch].
  2. Run npm publish.

check-engine's People

Contributors

barakplasma avatar bastienmoulia avatar johnmillard-ra avatar kwpeters avatar mohlsen avatar olexme avatar yashdalfthegray avatar

Watchers

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