I am working on an app wherein I would like to be able to install NPM modules via the frontend. I have no idea, though, how to do so. That is, I know how to do CRUD actions via the front end, but I don't know how to either interact with the command line or run command line functions via the front end.
Are there packages that can help with this or is this built into Node.js somehow?
In short, how can I connect my front-end to my backend in such a way that I can install an NPM package?
What you want is the child_process module. It's built-in so you don't need to install any additional module.
Mostly what you're looking for is either spawn() or exec().
For example, if you want to run npm install some_module you can do:
const { exec } = require('child_process');
let command = 'npm install some_module';
let options = { cwd: '/path/to/node/project' };
exec(command, options, (error, stdout, stderr) => {
// Do anything you want with program output here:
console.log('output:', stdout, stderr);
});
You may check the documentation for child_process in Node JS:
Child Process
const { spawn } = require('child_process');
const ls = spawn('ls', ['-lh', '/usr']);
ls.stdout.on('data', (data) => {
console.log(`stdout: ${data}`);
});
ls.on('close', (code) => {
console.log(`child process exited with code ${code}`);
});
The key difference between exec() and spawn() is how they return the data. As exec() stores all the output in a buffer, it is more memory intensive than spawn(), which streams the output as it comes.
Generally, if you are not expecting large amounts of data to be returned, you can use exec() for simplicity. Good examples of use-cases are creating a folder or getting the status of a file. However, if you are expecting a large amount of output from your command, then you should use spawn()
The easiest way to install an npm package via "the front end" is to have node spawn npm as a child process based off of the package name that the client provides.
var child = require('child_process').exec(`npm i ${package_name}`);
child.on('exit',function(){
//npm finished
});
This should install the module given that package_name is the name of the npm package, in the same directory that the script is running in. In terms of getting the package name from the front end to the back end, there are several different ways to do that.
You cannot run the your backend application without NPM modules installed, one thing that I think you can do is to make a plain nodejs file without any modules, which will receive the args when invoked, and you can use that args to the required modules, because that file will run with just core modules
gulp.task('build', function () {
// Build, generate files...
});
gulp.task('clear', function () {
// Delete generated files.
});
gulp.task('rebuild', function () {
// First: clear
// Then: build
});
In most case, "build" task doesn't need previous generated files to be removed (which slows the build process).
But there is times when I want to run "clear" and "build" task in one command:
Of course "rebuild" task depends on "clear" and "build", but if I use dependency hint like
gulp.task('rebuild', ['clear', 'build']);
the two tasks run asynchronously, which results in unexpected problem!
The easy way to solve this problem is run:
gulp clear
gulp build
but a single command
gulp rebuild
is easier, right? :P
By the way, gulp.series() has been deprecated...
It's not perfect but should work. Extract build task into a function. Then excute in the build and rebuild tasks.
var build = function() {
return gulp.src().concat();
}
gulp.task('build', function () {
return build();
});
gulp.task('clear', function () {
// Delete generated files.
});
gulp.task('rebuild', ['clear'], function () {
return build();
});
My solution isn't via Gulp as you requested, but NPM may be a better choice since you probably have NPM right there handy. All you're trying to do is save a few keystrokes.
Add an NPM script "rg" (rebuild-gulp) which does what you need:
"scripts": {
"rg": "gulp clear && gulp build"
}
Invoke with npm run rg
I see people using gulp with webpack. But then I read webpack can replace gulp? I'm completely confused here...can someone explain?
UPDATE
in the end I started with gulp. I was new to modern front-end and just wanted to get up and running quick. Now that I've got my feet quite wet after more than a year, I'm ready to move to webpack. I suggest the same route for people who start off in the same shoes. Not saying you can't try webpack but just sayin if it seems complicated start with gulp first...nothing wrong with that.
If you don't want gulp, yes there's grunt but you could also just specify commands in your package.json and call them from the command-line without a task runner just to get up and running initially. For example:
"scripts": {
"babel": "babel src -d build",
"browserify": "browserify build/client/app.js -o dist/client/scripts/app.bundle.js",
"build": "npm run clean && npm run babel && npm run prepare && npm run browserify",
"clean": "rm -rf build && rm -rf dist",
"copy:server": "cp build/server.js dist/server.js",
"copy:index": "cp src/client/index.html dist/client/index.html",
"copy": "npm run copy:server && npm run copy:index",
"prepare": "mkdir -p dist/client/scripts/ && npm run copy",
"start": "node dist/server"
},
This answer might help. Task Runners (Gulp, Grunt, etc) and Bundlers (Webpack, Browserify). Why use together?
...and here's an example of using webpack from within a gulp task. This goes a step further and assumes that your webpack config is written in es6.
var gulp = require('gulp');
var webpack = require('webpack');
var gutil = require('gutil');
var babel = require('babel/register');
var config = require(path.join('../..', 'webpack.config.es6.js'));
gulp.task('webpack-es6-test', function(done){
webpack(config).run(onBuild(done));
});
function onBuild(done) {
return function(err, stats) {
if (err) {
gutil.log('Error', err);
if (done) {
done();
}
} else {
Object.keys(stats.compilation.assets).forEach(function(key) {
gutil.log('Webpack: output ', gutil.colors.green(key));
});
gutil.log('Webpack: ', gutil.colors.blue('finished ', stats.compilation.name));
if (done) {
done();
}
}
}
}
I think you'll find that as your app gets more complicated, you might want to use gulp with a webpack task as per example above. This allows you to do a few more interesting things in your build that webpack loaders and plugins really don't do, ie. creating output directories, starting servers, etc. Well, to be succinct, webpack actually can do those things, but you might find them limited for your long term needs. One of the biggest advantages you get from gulp -> webpack is that you can customize your webpack config for different environments and have gulp do the right task for the right time. Its really up to you, but there's nothing wrong with running webpack from gulp, in fact there's some pretty interesting examples of how to do it. The example above is basically from jlongster.
NPM scripts can do the same as gulp, but in about 50x less code. In fact, with no code at all, only command line arguments.
For example, the use case you described where you want to have different code for different environments.
With Webpack + NPM Scripts, it's this easy:
"prebuild:dev": "npm run clean:wwwroot",
"build:dev": "cross-env NODE_ENV=development webpack --config config/webpack.development.js --hot --profile --progress --colors --display-cached",
"postbuild:dev": "npm run copy:index.html && npm run rename:index.html",
"prebuild:production": "npm run clean:wwwroot",
"build:production": "cross-env NODE_ENV=production webpack --config config/webpack.production.js --profile --progress --colors --display-cached --bail",
"postbuild:production": "npm run copy:index.html && npm run rename:index.html",
"clean:wwwroot": "rimraf -- wwwroot/*",
"copy:index.html": "ncp wwwroot/index.html Views/Shared",
"rename:index.html": "cd ../PowerShell && elevate.exe -c renamer --find \"index.html\" --replace \"_Layout.cshtml\" \"../MyProject/Views/Shared/*\"",
Now you simply maintain two webpack config scripts, one for development mode, webpack.development.js, and one for production mode, webpack.production.js. I also utilize a webpack.common.js which houses webpack config shared on all environments, and use webpackMerge to merge them.
Because of the coolness of NPM scripts, it allows for easy chaining, similar to how gulp does Streams/pipes.
In the example above, to build for developement, you simply go to your command line and execute npm run build:dev.
NPM would first run prebuild:dev,
Then build:dev,
And finally postbuild:dev.
The pre and post prefixes tell NPM which order to execute in.
If you notice, with Webpack + NPM scripts, you can run a native programs, such as rimraf, instead of a gulp-wrapper for a native program such as gulp-rimraf. You can also run native Windows .exe files as I did here with elevate.exe or native *nix files on Linux or Mac.
Try doing the same thing with gulp. You'll have to wait for someone to come along and write a gulp-wrapper for the native program you want to use. In addition, you'll likely need to write convoluted code like this: (taken straight from angular2-seed repo)
Gulp Development code
import * as gulp from 'gulp';
import * as gulpLoadPlugins from 'gulp-load-plugins';
import * as merge from 'merge-stream';
import * as util from 'gulp-util';
import { join/*, sep, relative*/ } from 'path';
import { APP_DEST, APP_SRC, /*PROJECT_ROOT, */TOOLS_DIR, TYPED_COMPILE_INTERVAL } from '../../config';
import { makeTsProject, templateLocals } from '../../utils';
const plugins = <any>gulpLoadPlugins();
let typedBuildCounter = TYPED_COMPILE_INTERVAL; // Always start with the typed build.
/**
* Executes the build process, transpiling the TypeScript files (except the spec and e2e-spec files) for the development
* environment.
*/
export = () => {
let tsProject: any;
let typings = gulp.src([
'typings/index.d.ts',
TOOLS_DIR + '/manual_typings/**/*.d.ts'
]);
let src = [
join(APP_SRC, '**/*.ts'),
'!' + join(APP_SRC, '**/*.spec.ts'),
'!' + join(APP_SRC, '**/*.e2e-spec.ts')
];
let projectFiles = gulp.src(src);
let result: any;
let isFullCompile = true;
// Only do a typed build every X builds, otherwise do a typeless build to speed things up
if (typedBuildCounter < TYPED_COMPILE_INTERVAL) {
isFullCompile = false;
tsProject = makeTsProject({isolatedModules: true});
projectFiles = projectFiles.pipe(plugins.cached());
util.log('Performing typeless TypeScript compile.');
} else {
tsProject = makeTsProject();
projectFiles = merge(typings, projectFiles);
}
result = projectFiles
.pipe(plugins.plumber())
.pipe(plugins.sourcemaps.init())
.pipe(plugins.typescript(tsProject))
.on('error', () => {
typedBuildCounter = TYPED_COMPILE_INTERVAL;
});
if (isFullCompile) {
typedBuildCounter = 0;
} else {
typedBuildCounter++;
}
return result.js
.pipe(plugins.sourcemaps.write())
// Use for debugging with Webstorm/IntelliJ
// https://github.com/mgechev/angular2-seed/issues/1220
// .pipe(plugins.sourcemaps.write('.', {
// includeContent: false,
// sourceRoot: (file: any) =>
// relative(file.path, PROJECT_ROOT + '/' + APP_SRC).replace(sep, '/') + '/' + APP_SRC
// }))
.pipe(plugins.template(templateLocals()))
.pipe(gulp.dest(APP_DEST));
};
Gulp Production code
import * as gulp from 'gulp';
import * as gulpLoadPlugins from 'gulp-load-plugins';
import { join } from 'path';
import { TMP_DIR, TOOLS_DIR } from '../../config';
import { makeTsProject, templateLocals } from '../../utils';
const plugins = <any>gulpLoadPlugins();
const INLINE_OPTIONS = {
base: TMP_DIR,
useRelativePaths: true,
removeLineBreaks: true
};
/**
* Executes the build process, transpiling the TypeScript files for the production environment.
*/
export = () => {
let tsProject = makeTsProject();
let src = [
'typings/index.d.ts',
TOOLS_DIR + '/manual_typings/**/*.d.ts',
join(TMP_DIR, '**/*.ts')
];
let result = gulp.src(src)
.pipe(plugins.plumber())
.pipe(plugins.inlineNg2Template(INLINE_OPTIONS))
.pipe(plugins.typescript(tsProject))
.once('error', function () {
this.once('finish', () => process.exit(1));
});
return result.js
.pipe(plugins.template(templateLocals()))
.pipe(gulp.dest(TMP_DIR));
};
The actual gulp code is much more complicated that this, as this is only 2 of the several dozen gulp files in the repo.
So, which one is easier to you?
In my opinion, NPM scripts far surpasses gulp and grunt, in both effectiveness and ease of use, and all front-end developers should consider using it in their workflow because it is a major time saver.
UPDATE
There is one scenario I've encountered where I wanted to use Gulp in combination with NPM scripts and Webpack.
When I need to do remote debugging on an iPad or Android device for example, I need to start up extra servers. In the past I ran all the servers as separate processes, from within IntelliJ IDEA (Or Webstorm) that is easy with the "Compound" Run Configuration. But if I need to stop and restart them, it was tedious to have to close 5 different server tabs, plus the output was spread across the different windows.
One of the benefits of gulp is that is can chain all the output from separate independent processes into one console window, which becomes the parent of all the child servers.
So I created a very simple gulp task that just runs my NPM scripts or the commands directly, so all the output appears in one window, and I can easily end all 5 servers at once by closing the gulp task window.
Gulp.js
/**
* Gulp / Node utilities
*/
var gulp = require('gulp-help')(require('gulp'));
var utils = require('gulp-util');
var log = utils.log;
var con = utils.colors;
/**
* Basic workflow plugins
*/
var shell = require('gulp-shell'); // run command line from shell
var browserSync = require('browser-sync');
/**
* Performance testing plugins
*/
var ngrok = require('ngrok');
// Variables
var serverToProxy1 = "localhost:5000";
var finalPort1 = 8000;
// When the user enters "gulp" on the command line, the default task will automatically be called. This default task below, will run all other tasks automatically.
// Default task
gulp.task('default', function (cb) {
console.log('Starting dev servers!...');
gulp.start(
'devserver:jit',
'nodemon',
'browsersync',
'ios_webkit_debug_proxy'
'ngrok-url',
// 'vorlon',
// 'remotedebug_ios_webkit_adapter'
);
});
gulp.task('nodemon', shell.task('cd ../backend-nodejs && npm run nodemon'));
gulp.task('devserver:jit', shell.task('npm run devserver:jit'));
gulp.task('ios_webkit_debug_proxy', shell.task('npm run ios-webkit-debug-proxy'));
gulp.task('browsersync', shell.task(`browser-sync start --proxy ${serverToProxy1} --port ${finalPort1} --no-open`));
gulp.task('ngrok-url', function (cb) {
return ngrok.connect(finalPort1, function (err, url) {
site = url;
log(con.cyan('ngrok'), '- serving your site from', con.yellow(site));
cb();
});
});
// gulp.task('vorlon', shell.task('vorlon'));
// gulp.task('remotedebug_ios_webkit_adapter', shell.task('remotedebug_ios_webkit_adapter'));
Still quite a bit of code just to run 5 tasks, in my opinion, but it works for the purpose. One caveate is that gulp-shell doesn't seem to run some commands correctly, such as ios-webkit-debug-proxy. So I had to create an NPM Script that just executes the same command, and then it works.
So I primarily use NPM Scripts for all my tasks, but occasionally when I need to run a bunch of servers at once, I'll fire up my Gulp task to help out. Pick the right tool for the right job.
UPDATE 2
I now use a script called concurrently which does the same thing as the gulp task above. It runs multiple CLI scripts in parallel and pipes them all to the same console window, and its very simple to use. Once again, no code required (well, the code is inside the node_module for concurrently, but you don't have to concern yourself with that)
// NOTE: If you need to run a command with spaces in it, you need to use
// double quotes, and they must be escaped (at least on windows).
// It doesn't seem to work with single quotes.
"run:all": "concurrently \"npm run devserver\" nodemon browsersync ios_webkit_debug_proxy ngrok-url"
This runs all 5 scripts in parallel piped out to one terminal. Awesome! So that this point, I rarely use gulp, since there are so many cli scripts to do the same tasks with no code.
I suggest you read these articles which compare them in depth.
How to Use NPM as a Build Tool
Why we should stop using Grunt & Gulp
Why I Left Gulp and Grunt for NPM Scripts
I used both options in my different projects.
Here is one boilerplate that I put together using gulp with webpack - https://github.com/iroy2000/react-reflux-boilerplate-with-webpack.
I have some other project used only webpack with npm tasks.
And they both works totally fine. And I think it burns down to is how complicated your task is, and how much control you want to have in your configuration.
For example, if you tasks is simple, let's say dev, build, test ... etc ( which is very standard ), you are totally fine with just simple webpack with npm tasks.
But if you have very complicated workflow and you want to have more control of your configuration ( because it is coding ), you could go for gulp route.
But from my experience, webpack ecosystem provides more than enough plugins and loaders that I will need, and so I love using the bare minimum approach unless there is something you can only do in gulp. And also, it will make your configuration easier if you have one less thing in your system.
And a lot of times, nowadays, I see people actually replacing gulp and browsify all together with webpack alone.
The concepts of Gulp and Webpack are quite different. You tell Gulp how to put front-end code together step-by-step, but you tell Webpack what you want through a config file.
Here is a short article (5 min read) I wrote explaining my understanding of the differences: https://medium.com/#Maokai/compile-the-front-end-from-gulp-to-webpack-c45671ad87fe
Our company moved from Gulp to Webpack in the past year. Although it took some time, we figured out how to move all we did in Gulp to Webpack. So to us, everything we did in Gulp we can also do through Webpack, but not the other way around.
As of today, I'd suggest just use Webpack and avoid the mixture of Gulp and Webpack so you and your team do not need to learn and maintain both, especially because they are requiring very different mindsets.
Honestly I think the best is to use both.
Webpack for all javascript related.
Gulp for all css related.
I still have to find a decent solution for packaging css with webpack, and so far I am happy using gulp for css and webpack for javascript.
I also use npm scripts as #Tetradev as described. Especially since I am using Visual Studio, and while NPM Task runner is pretty reliable Webpack Task Runner is pretty buggy.
I'm trying to use a lib that I need to install and then link with npm. I don't see any clear path for me to access my server this way using the jitsu cli. How would I go about doing this?
I work for nodejitsu.
First, I believe your problem can be solved by using bundledDependencies in your package.json like so:
{
"bundledDependencies": [ "myModule", "myFork" ]
}
Then, when jitsu bundles your app for deployment (which uses npm), it will also bundle your dependency with it.
If the package is on a personal fork of a project on github, npm also can pull directly from a git url. Check out http://npmjs.org/doc/ for more information on ways to pull npm modules from non-registry sources.
Also: We have a dedicated support team which can be contacted either through support#nodejitsu.com or at #nodejitsu on irc.freenode.net .
Have you tried using npm programmatically? The docs give the following example:
var npm = require("npm")
npm.commands.install(["some", "args"], function (er, data) {
if (er) return commandFailed(er)
// command succeeded, and data might have some info
})
You can find the full docs here: https://github.com/isaacs/npm/blob/master/README.md
So in your case maybe you do: (in psuedo code)
npm.commands.install(['mylibarary'], function(er, data) {
if (er) { throw Error(); }
npm.commands.link( ... args ... function(er, data) {
... happy amazing awesome ...
});
});
You should also drop by the IRC room. The people there are very helpful.