Package Exports
- tsconfig-paths
- tsconfig-paths/lib
- tsconfig-paths/lib/tsconfig-loader
- tsconfig-paths/register
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 (tsconfig-paths) to support the "exports" field. If that is not possible, create a JSPM override to customize the exports field for this package.
Readme
tsconfig-paths
Use this to load modules whose location is specified in the paths section of tsconfig.json. Both loading at run-time and via API are supported.
Typescript by default mimics the Node.js runtime resolution strategy of modules. But it also allows the use of path mapping which allows arbitrary module paths (that doesn't start with "/" or ".") to be specified and mapped to physical paths in the filesystem. The typescript compiler can resolve these paths from tsconfig so it will compile OK. But if you then try to exeute the compiled files with node (or ts-node), it will only look in the node_modules folders all the way up to the root of the filesystem and thus will not find the modules specified by paths in tsconfig.
If you require this package's tsconfig-paths/register module it will read the paths from tsconfig.json and convert node's module loading calls into to physcial file paths that node can load.
How to install
yarn add --dev tsconfig-pathsor
npm install --save-dev tsconfig-pathsHow to use
With node
node -r tsconfig-paths/register main.js
With ts-node
ts-node -r tsconfig-paths/register main.ts
If process.env.TS_NODE_PROJECT is set it will be used to resolved tsconfig.json
With mocha and ts-node
mocha --compilers ts:ts-node/register -r tsconfig-paths/register
Bootstrap tsconfig-paths with explicit params
If you want more granular control over tsconfig-paths you can bootstrap it. This can be useful if you for instance have compiled with tsc to another directory where tsconfig.json doesn't exists.
const tsConfig = require("./tsconfig.json");
const tsConfigPaths = require("tsconfig-paths");
const baseUrl = "./"; // Either absolute or relative path. If relative it's resolved to current working directory.
tsConfigPaths.register({
baseUrl,
paths: tsConfig.compilerOptions.paths
});Then run with:
node -r ./tsconfig-paths-bootstrap.js main.js
Config loading process
- Use explicit params passed to register
- Use
process.env.TS_NODE_PROJECTto resolve tsConfig.json and the specified baseUrl and paths. - Resolves tsconfig.json from current working directory and the specified baseUrl and paths.
Programmatic use
The API consists of these functions:
createMatchPath(absoluteBaseUrl, paths)
This function will create a function that can match paths. It accepts baseUrl and paths directly as they are specified in tsconfig and will handle resolving paths to absolute form. The created function has this signature:
(sourceFileName: string, requestedModule: string, readPackageJson: (packageJsonPath: string) => any, fileExists: any, extensions?: Array<string>)
matchFromAbsolutePaths(absolutePathMappings)
Same structure as paths in tsconfig but all paths needs to be resolved to absolute paths. This function is lower level and requries that the paths as already been resolved to absolute form.