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pnpm-workspace-graph

Visualize project relationships in your PNPM workspace

Quick start

  1. Install the tool:

    # Install the tool globally so that you can invoke it in any folder:
    $ pnpm install --global pnpm-workspace-graph
  2. Invoke the tool:

    If your monorepo is using a regular PNPM workspace:

    # This is the folder where you cloned your repo:
    $ cd my-pnpm-monorepo
    
    # Launch the app in your web browser
    $ pnpm-workspace-graph
    
    pnpm-workspace-graph is started at http://127.0.0.1:8188
    Use Ctrl+C to close it

    If your monorepo is using a Rush workspace for PNPM:

    # This is the folder where you cloned your repo:
    $ cd my-rush-monorepo
    
    # Rush's pnpm-workspace.yaml is located in the "common/temp" folder.
    # Run "rush install" to ensure it has been generated and is up to date.
    #
    # IMPORTANT: Your rush.json config file must specify useWorkspaces=true
    $ rush install
    
    # Launch the app in your web browser, specifying to use "common/temp"
    $ pnpm-workspace-graph --cwd common/temp
    
    pnpm-workspace-graph is started at http://127.0.0.1:8188
    Use Ctrl+C to close it
  3. When the app page appears in your web browser appears, click the Filter button:

    Settings Panel

    Using the Settings Panel to select a subset of projects

    A typical monorepo will have too many projects to be meaningfully visualized. The app allows you to use PNPM's --filter syntax to select a subset of projects that you are interested in visualizing. In separate input boxes, enter the names of the projects to be included in the view. They must be workspace projects referenced by pnpm-workspace.yaml. Specify the full name as it appears in the package.json "name" field.

    To include all workspace projects that are dependencies of my-package, specify: ...my-package

    To indicate all workspace projects that depend on my-package, specify: my-package...

    Refer to the PNPM documentation for more information about the --filter syntax.

  4. After you have selected a subset of projects, click the [X] to close the Settings Panel. Using the mouse, you can move the nodes to make a nice arrangement. Use the mouse wheel to zoom in or out.

    Example graph

    An example graph made by cloning the https://github.com/pnpm/pnpm workspace

Features

  1. Layout the graph with different directions: Top to Bottom or Left to Right.
Top to Bottom Left to Right
  1. Save the graph to PNG for later use.

CLI parameters

$ pnpm-workspace-graph --help

Usage: pnpm-workspace-graph [options]

Options:
  -V, --version      output the version number
  -C, --cwd <cwd>    working directory
  -h, --host <host>  host (default: "127.0.0.1")
  -p, --port <port>  port (default: 8188)
  -o, --open         open browser (default: true)
  --help             display help for command

-C, --cwd

Default: process.cwd()

Specify working directory. This directory must contain the pnpm-workspace.yaml file that defines your workspace.

-h, --host

Default: 127.0.0.1

Specify network interface where the local web server will run.

-p --port

Default: 8188

Specify the localhost port where the local web server will run.

NOTE: If you want to invoke multiple instances of the tool, you must specify different ports. This will be improved in the future.

-o --open

Default: true

Whether to launch the web browser automatically to show the specified host/port.

Contributing

To build and debug the project:

$ git clone https://github.com/chengcyber/pnpm-workspace-graph.git
$ cd pnpm-workspace-graph

# Install dependencies
$ pnpm install

# Launch the Webpack localhost dev server
$ pnpm dev:client

# (In a separate shell window)
# Launch the TypeScript compiler in "watch mode"
$ pnpm dev  # in another shell

# (In a separate shell window)
# Invoke the CLI tool using the "fixture/basic" testing workspace
$ node lib/cli.js -C fixture/basic

LICENSE

MIT @chengcyber