Many Node.js modules include test and example code in their repos. This code needs to require the module itself.
But whereas modules depending on foobar
can write require('foobar')
, the test and example code within foobar
cannot reliably require itself that way. It must use a relative path like var foobar = require('../..')
instead.
Being able to do require('foobar')
instead of require('..')
has a few advantages. The code can be moved around. Example code is a tad clearer and can be reused in a client module without changes. And if you are authoring in TypeScript, then import foobar = require('foobar')
picks up all the static type info from foobar.d.ts
, exactly as a client module would see it.
If you ensure your foobar
module directory is a direct child of a directory called node_modules
, then it can require itself using require('foobar')
and Node's module resolution logic will successfully resolve such a call.
However, if you wish to treat your node_modules
directories like an artefact that is always safe to clean/delete, this approach is not going to fly. Development work and git repos under node_modules
may be inadvertently deleted.
A straight-forward solution is to add a file called foobar.js
inside foobar
's node_modules
subdirectory. This file simply contains module.exports = require('..');
.
You could automate this step using a simple echo ...
command in an npm script, but that won't work cross-platform. Another way is to put the equivalent of the echo...
command into a reliable cross-platform node source file, and call that from an npm script.
Solution B is precisely what require-self
provides.
- Add
require-self
as a devDependency to your module. - Call the
require-self
bin command in your module'sprepare
npm script. - Run
npm install
, which will install deps and then run theprepare
script. (NOTE: if you are using npm v3 or lower, you'll have to run theprepare
script manually, vianpm run prepare
)
The package.json
for your foobar
module will end up something like this:
{
"name": "foobar",
...
"scripts": {
"build": "...",
"prepare": "npm run build && require-self"
},
"devDependencies": {
...
"require-self": "^0.x"
}
Now all test and example code in the foobar
module can use var foobar = require('foobar');
.
The MIT License (MIT)
Copyright (c) 2015 Troy Gerwien
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