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npm-san-check

This tool is considered as a practice. Please use at your own risk.

Yet another package.json update checker.

Why another? Because I really liked npm-check-updates, but its shorter command ncu conflicts with NVIDIA's Nsight Compute CLI, and it has 334 dependencies in total.

Introduction

The CLI tool is a practice to mimic the core (i.e., a small subset of) functionalities of npm-check-updates with reasonably fewer dependencies. In short:

  • It should only work with Node.js and npm.
  • It should only work with Node.js v18 or above as vanilla fetch is used.
  • It doesn't support workspaces.
  • It can only check local dependencies (i.e., where a package.json is presented).
  • It only has CLI interface.

The good side is:

Installation

npm i -g npm-san-check
npm-sc

Or, run with npx:

npx npm-san-check

How the update is determined

By default, the tool would check dependencies and devDependencies, as those dependencies are mostly safe to update.

Generally, updating peerDependencies and optionalDependencies should be done manually, as they require careful treatment and wrong dependency versions would cause the whole package unable to be installed or used. You can still check and update the version using this tool, though not recommended.

"Newer"

The tool would try to update the dependencies to the newer versions that fit the semantic:

  • Unary ranges having "larger than" semantics (^, ~, >, >=) are updated to the newest versions that satisfies them, with the range symbol kept.
  • Wildcards (*, x, X) are preserved.
  • Other ranges, as well as hyphen ranges (-) and compound ranges (||), are ignored.

This is the default strategy of the tool.

"Latest"

The tool would update the dependencies to the latest versions with the policies kept.

  • Unary ranges (^, ~, <, <=, >, >=, = or omitted) are updated to the latest versions with the range symbols kept.
  • For hyphen ranges (-), the right side is updated to the newest version.
  • Wildcards (*, x, X) are preserved.
  • Compound ranges (connected by ||) are ignored.

This is the strategy similar (but not equal) to the one npm-check-updates uses.

Usage

npm-sc [...filters]
       [-u | --update] [-l | --latest] [--pre | --prerelease]
       [-I | --no-deps] [-D | --no-dev-deps] [--peer] [--opt]
       [-p | --package] [-r | --registry] [--proxy]

Behaviors

filters: Packages to be updated.

  • Supports * for glob matching (e.g., *eslint* matches every packages that have eslint in their name, like @eslint/js or @typescript-eslint/parser).
  • Words are combined by OR logic.

-u, --update: Overwrite package.json with the updated dependencies.

  • In case version control is not used or the tool has done something bad, a back-up file (usually package.sc.json) is created before updating.

-l, --latest: Let the updater to use the "latest" updating strategy instead of "newer", which might be more possible to include breaking changes.

--pre, --prerelease: Include prerelease versions.

  • By default, prerelease versions are excluded from update targets, unless the package version itself is already a prerelease.

Scopes

-I, --no-deps: Ignore dependencies.

-D, --no-dev-deps: Ignore devDependencies.

--peer: Check peerDependencies.

--opt: Check optionalDependencies.

Environmental Settings

-p, --package: Specify the location of the package file, relative to current working directory. Default to package.json.

-r, --registry: Specify the URL of the registry. Default to the npm registry.

--proxy: Specify the proxy server when checking the update.

  • Environment variables HTTP_PROXY and HTTPS_PROXY are also considered, so it's not necessary to set this option if those variables have been set.

License

MIT © i'DLisT 2024

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Yet another package.json update checker.

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