I have developed a nodejs project as an umd library, with the purpose to use it in a another nodejs project. The library project builds fine and generates the index.js file and index.min.js file.
But when I tried installing the library project locally using npm install "asolute path". It brings all the things in the library project. And the size of my project I want to use the library project grew. Seems it is because of all the files in library project is getting copied.
Thanks for any help in advance.
Have you added an .npmignore file?
Also, you'll probably want to use npm link for local development.
I developed an application in angular2 and now I need to deploy it.
Currently I have a wwww root folder containing:
html files
js files (generated from typescript)
css files (generated from scss)
/node_modules/ folders
/bower_componenets/ folder
The last two folders (node_modules & bower_components) are very heavy (300 mb and thousands of files) and it is very frustrating copy them using FTP.
Is there a way to keep only the needed files?
Thanks a lot
You can use gulp for creating bundle from the libraries into single file ex. vendor.js. Also deploying via ftp is very primitive. You should put your app on GitHub or Bitbucket and then log in to the server and pull your repository there and because you don't put the libraries folders into your git repository you will install the libraries on the server. If you want to go more advance you can use tool like Jenkins combined with gulp task for building your application. Jenkins will build your application automatically and deploy to your server on every push on your git repository
The following question could help you if you want to use Gulp:
How do I actually deploy an Angular 2 + Typescript + systemjs app?
Note that some answers are for beta versions and packaging changed for RC versions.
Angular-cli could also help you to build your application within the following command:
ng build -prod
Moreover using tree shaking could be interesting to minimize the weight of JavaScript files. See this article for more details:
http://blog.mgechev.com/2016/06/26/tree-shaking-angular2-production-build-rollup-javascript/
I am working on client side application.
We are using the following technologies:
git, node, ember, grunt, sass and other components
Once I cloned the application from git server every time I have to do make tooling to download all the necessary node, sass and bower components and it will take 200MB of data will be downloaded and time consumed.
Is there any solution with out downloading the node modules the app has to run by reusing the Already downloaded modules with out make tooling.
Yes, you can include the node modules in your git repository as well. You'll still have to download them (there's no way around fetching the modules somehow). I'm guessing in your .gitignore you have a line that looks like node_modules. If you remove that line, the modules will be included in your git repository and will be included when you do a git clone.
Be aware that there are a couple of drawbacks to this method:
Git repo size will increase significantly
Modules that have to be compiled likely won't work on other machines, especially different OS's (developing on a Mac, deploying on Linux, for example).
I am new to Node.js programming and I have recently created a sample working web application using (express, backbone & other complimentary view technologies, with mongoDB). Now i am at a point where I want to deploy the same on a staging environment and I am not sure how to package this application and distribute the same. [I can take care of mongoDb and setting it up seperately]
I am from Java world and in there we create jars for reusable libs and war/ear packages for web applications which is deployed in a servlet container. Now in this case since node.js itself acts as a web container as well, how do i package my webapp?
Is there any standard format/guidelines of packaging node webapps built using express? (Is there a similar jar/war packaging systems for node apps?)
How do I deploy it once packaged? Would it become an exe, since it is also its own container?
PS: As of now I am thinking of just manually copying all the required source files into the staging environment and run npm commands to download all dependencies on that machine and then use 'forever' or some other mechanism to run my server.js. (Also, add some sort of monitoring, just in case app crashes and forever fails) I am not sure if that is the right way? I am sure there must be some standardized way of addressing this problem.
Deploying Node.js applications is very easy stuff. In maven, there is pom.xml. Related concept in Node.js is package.json. You can state your dependencies on package.json. You can also do environmental setup on package.json. For example, in dev environment you can say that
I want to run unit tests.
but in production;
I want to skip unit tests.
You have local repositories for maven under .m2 folder. In Node.js, there is node_modules folder under your Node.js project. You can see module folders with its name.
Let's come to the grunt part of this answer. Grunt is a task manager for your frontend assets, html, javascript, css. For example, before deployment you can minify html, css, javascript even images. You can also put grunt task run functions in package.json.
If you want to look at a sample application, you can find an example blog application here. Check folder structure and package.json for reference.
For deployment, I suggest you heroku deployment for startup applciations. You can find howto here. This is simple git based deployment.
On project running part, simply set your environment NODE_ENV=development and node app.js. Here app.js is in your project.
Here is relative concept for java and nodejs;
maven clean install => npm install
.m2 folder => node_modules(Under project folder)
mvn test => npm test(test section on package.json)
junit, powermock, ... => mocha, node-unit, ...
Spring MVC => Express.JS
pom.xml => package.json
import package => require('module_name')
There is no standardized way, but you're on the right track. If your package.json is up to date and well kept, you can just copy/zip/clone your app directory to the production system, excluding the node_modules.
On your production system, run
npm install to install your dependencies, npm test if you have tests and finally NODE_ENV=production node server.js
Some recent slides I considered to be quite helpful that also include the topic of wrappers like forever, can be found here.
Hope this might be helpful for somebody looking for the solution,Packaging of Node js apps can be done using "npm pack" command.It creates a zip file of your application which can be run in production/staging environment.
Is there any standard format/guidelines of packaging node webapps
built using express? (Is there a similar jar/war packaging systems for
node apps?)
Yes, the CommonJS Packages specification:
This specification describes the CommonJS package format for
distributing CommonJS programs and libraries. A CommonJS package is a
cohesive wrapping of a collection of modules, code and other assets
into a single form. It provides the basis for convenient delivery,
installation and management of CommonJS components.
For your next question:
2. How do I deploy it once packaged? Would it become an exe, since it is also its own container?
I second Hüseyin's suggestion to deploy on Heroku for production. For development and staging I use Node-Appliance with VirtualBox and Amazon EC2, respectively:
This program takes a Debian machine built by build-debian-cloud or
Debian-VirtualBox-Appliance and turns it into a Node.js "appliance",
capable of running a Node application deployed via git.
Your webapp will not become an exe.
few ways to approach this:
Push your code into Git repository, excluding everything that isn't your code (node_modules/**), then pull it in your staging environment, run npm install to restore all dependencies
create an NPM package out of it , install it via npm in your staging environment (this should also take care of all of the dependencies)
manual copy/ssh files to your staging environment (this can be automated with Grunt), than restore your dependencies via npm
I used zeit's pkg module. It can create cross platform deliverables for linux/win/macos. Actually used it in production and works fine without any issues.
It takes in all the js scripts and packages it into a single file.
The reason I used it is because it helps in securing your source code. That way in production at customers environment they will have access to application but not the source code.
Also one of the advantages is that at production environment, you do not actually need to have the customer install node.js as the node binaries also get packaged inside the build.
https://www.npmjs.com/package/pkg
I'm working on my node.js demo.location.io web app at the same time as my location.io library. I'd like to be able to make changes to the location.io library and push them up to github from inside the node_modules folder. Is there any support for this in npm?
(If I understand your question) You can use
npm link
to link your location.io to your local demo.location.io repo. More info here