1. npm-packlist
Get a list of the files to add from a folder into an npm package
npm-packlist
Package: npm-packlist
Created by: npm
Last modified: Mon, 08 Jan 2024 21:55:30 GMT
Version: 8.0.2
License: ISC
Downloads: 38,471,097
Repository: https://github.com/npm/npm-packlist

Install

npm install npm-packlist
yarn add npm-packlist

npm-packlist

Get a list of the files to add from a folder into an npm package.

These can be handed to tar like so to make an npm
package tarball:

 const Arborist = require('@npmcli/arborist')
const packlist = require('npm-packlist')
const tar = require('tar')
const packageDir = '/path/to/package'
const packageTarball = '/path/to/package.tgz'

const arborist = new Arborist({ path: packageDir })
arborist.loadActual().then((tree) => {
  packlist(tree)
    .then(files => tar.create({
      prefix: 'package/',
      cwd: packageDir,
      file: packageTarball,
      gzip: true
    }, files))
    .then(_ => {
      // tarball has been created, continue with your day
    })
  })

This uses the following rules:

  1. If a package.json file is found, and it has a files list,
    then ignore everything that isn't in files. Always include the root
    readme, license, licence and copying files, if they exist, as well
    as the package.json file itself. Non-root readme, license, licence and
    copying files are included by default, but can be excluded using the
    files list e.g. "!readme".

  2. If there's no package.json file (or it has no files list), and
    there is a .npmignore file, then ignore all the files in the
    .npmignore file.

  3. If there's no package.json with a files list, and there's no
    .npmignore file, but there is a .gitignore file, then ignore
    all the files in the .gitignore file.

  4. Everything in the root node_modules is ignored, unless it's a
    bundled dependency. If it IS a bundled dependency, and it's a
    symbolic link, then the target of the link is included, not the
    symlink itself.

  5. Unless they're explicitly included (by being in a files list, or
    a !negated rule in a relevant .npmignore or .gitignore),
    always ignore certain common cruft files:

    1. .npmignore and .gitignore files (their effect is in the package
      already, there's no need to include them in the package)
    2. editor junk like .*.swp, ._* and .*.orig files
    3. .npmrc files (these may contain private configs)
    4. The node_modules/.bin folder
    5. Waf and gyp cruft like /build/config.gypi and .lock-wscript
    6. Darwin's .DS_Store files because wtf are those even
    7. npm-debug.log files at the root of a project

    You can explicitly re-include any of these with a files list in
    package.json or a negated ignore file rule.

Only the package.json file in the very root of the project is ever
inspected for a files list. Below the top level of the root package,
package.json is treated as just another file, and no package-specific
semantics are applied.

Interaction between package.json and .npmignore rules

In previous versions of this library, the files list in package.json
was used as an initial filter to drive further tree walking. That is no
longer the case as of version 6.0.0.

If you have a package.json file with a files array within, any top
level .npmignore and .gitignore files will be ignored.

If a directory is listed in files, then any rules in nested .npmignore files within that directory will be honored.

For example, with this package.json:

 {
  "files": [ "dir" ]
}

a .npmignore file at dir/.npmignore (and any subsequent
sub-directories) will be honored. However, a .npmignore at the root
level will be skipped.

Additionally, with this package.json:

{
  "files": ["dir/subdir"]
}

a .npmignore file at dir/.npmignore will be honored, as well as dir/subdir/.npmignore.

Any specific file matched by an exact filename in the package.json files list will be included, and cannot be excluded, by any .npmignore files.

API

Same API as ignore-walk, except providing a tree is required and there are hard-coded file list and rule sets.

The Walker class requires an arborist tree, and if any bundled dependencies are found will include them as well as their own dependencies in the resulting file set.

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