JSPM

  • Created
  • Published
  • Downloads 2233423
  • Score
    100M100P100Q201526F
  • License MIT

Find all dependencies within a JavaScript file using AMD module syntax

Package Exports

  • detective-amd
  • detective-amd/index.js

This package does not declare an exports field, so the exports above have been automatically detected and optimized by JSPM instead. If any package subpath is missing, it is recommended to post an issue to the original package (detective-amd) to support the "exports" field. If that is not possible, create a JSPM override to customize the exports field for this package.

Readme

detective-amd

CI npm version npm downloads

Returns a list of dependencies for a given JavaScript file or AST using any of the AMD module syntaxes.

Inspired by substack/node-detective but built for AMD.

npm install detective-amd

Usage

Let's say we have the following file definitions:

// a.js
define(['./b', './c'], function (b, c) {
  console.log(b, c);
});

// b.js
define({
  name: 'foo'
});

// c.js
define(function () {
  return 'bar';
});

Here's how you can grab the list of dependencies of a.js synchronously.

const fs = require('fs');
const detective = require('detective-amd');

const srcA = fs.readFileSync('a.js', 'utf8');

// Pass in the source code or an AST (if you've already parsed the file)
console.log(detective(srcA)); // prints ['./b', './c']

You may also (optionally) configure the detective via a second object argument detective(src, options) that supports the following options:

  • skipLazyLoaded: (Boolean) whether or not to omit inner requires in the list of extracted dependencies.
    • Note: this does not affect the REM form since those inner requires are not "lazily" fetched.

Syntax Support

Supports the 4 forms of AMD module syntax:

  • "named": define('name', [deps], func)
  • "dependency list": define([deps], func)
  • "factory": define(func(require))
  • "no dependencies": define({})

Extra forms:

  • "driver script" (or entry-point) syntax: require([deps], func)
  • "REM" (or CommonJS-like) form: define(function(require, exports, module) {}).

Also handles dynamically loaded dependencies (ex: inner requires).

Supports driver scripts

You can also find the dependencies from a script that has a top-level require (an app initialization/driver/entry-point script):

require([
  './a'
], function (a) {
  // My app will get booted up from here
});

Expression-based requires

If there's a require call that doesn't have a string literal but an expression, a string (escodegen-generated) representation will be returned.

For example, if a.js was of the "factory" form and contained a dynamic module name:

// a.js

define(function (require) {
  // Assume str is some variable that gets set to a string dynamically
  // const str = ...

  const b = require('./' + str);
  const c = require('./c');

  console.log(b, c);
});

The dependency list will be: [ '\'./\' + str', './c' ]

  • Even though that string representation isn't incredibly useful, it's still added to the list to represent/count that dependency

License

MIT