getmod

1.0.1 • Public • Published

getmod

Module loader with aliases

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This module tries to solve and improve the module loading. It's very common to have require()'s with relative paths like ../../../foo/bar.

This is a well-known problem known by the Node.js community: Better local require() paths for Node.js. There are some solutions that seem to work but I personally dislike most of them, especially the one which uses the node_modules directory to store the modules of your app. My advice is to only use node_modules for external modules, never for storing you own modules.

I'm not going to use this module. This is just a proof of concept. The cleanest way to solve the relative paths is by prefixing them with the __root variable. In fact, in my opinion Node.js should consider adding it, as it's perfectly aligned with the __filename and __dirname approach.

The way this module avoids the relative paths is by using more relative paths that shorten the paths and make them relative from anywhere. Think about them as marks, aliases, checkpoints, etc.

Marking a directory

Suppose you have this tree structure:

.
├ a
| └ b
|   └ c
|     └ file1.js
├ d
| └ e
|   └ f
|     └ file2.js
└ app.js

From file1.js if you need to load file2.js, the path is quite long: require('../../d/e/f/file2'). What about making the relative paths relative from .? Put a mark named my-mark pointing to the directory d:

// app.js
global.mod = require('getmod')();
 
mod.mark({
  'my-mark': 'd'
});
 
// file1.js
var f = mod('my-mark/e/f/file2');

Instead of my-mark, name the mark as d and you'll have a very descriptive path: mod('d/e/f/file2').

Marking a file

Marks can also point to a file. For example, you have a module you'd like to load with a very short path because it's pretty important, like a module that tells the status of your server:

mod.mark({
  // The ending ".js" is optional, like in require()
  status: 'path/to/the/status/module'
});
 
// Anywhere in your app
var status = mod('status');

Replacing require()

You can also use this library to load:

  • Any file without marks.
  • External and core modules.

Therefore, you can completely replace the require() function like so:

//The very first line in the entry point of your app
global.mod = require('getmod')();

Now you can use mod() from anywhere instead of require(). In fact, this is the way to use this library.

Functions


module() : Function

Creates a new namespace for the marks.

var mod = require('getmod')();

mod(name) : Any

Loads the module. It returns whatever is exported, just like the built-in require() function. Paths can be any of these:

  • Mark: mod('my-mark/file.js')
  • System path: mod('./a/b/c/file.js')
  • External module: mod('express')
  • Core module: mod('fs')

If the module name has a mark and is the same as any core module, ie: util, the core module will be loaded, just the same behaviour as with external modules with the same name as a core module.

mod.mark(marks) : undefined

Puts marks that point to relative paths. It takes the directory of the current file the reference from which the paths are relative. It can be called multiple times.

//cwd = /foo/bar
 
// ./file1.js
mod.mark({
  c: 'a/b/c'
});
 
// ./random/path/file2.js
mod.mark({
  f: 'd/e/f'
});
 
//Anywhere in your app
mod.resolve('c'); // /foo/bar/a/b/c
mod.resolve('f'); // /foo/bar/random/path/d/e/f

mod.resolve(name) : String

Returns the absolute path of the module, just like the built-in require() function, but it also resolves marks.

//cwd = /foo/bar
 
mod.mark({
  file: 'a/b/c/file.js'
});
 
mod.resolve('file'); // /foo/bar/a/b/c/file.js

module.resolveLoose(name) : String

Same as resolve() but without any restrictions. The name can be anything including marks, even if the path doesn't exist it is still resolved.

//cwd = /foo/bar
 
mod.mark({
  file: 'a/b/c/file.js'
});
 
mod.resolveLoose('file'); // /foo/bar/a/b/c/file.js
mod.resolveLoose('./a/b/c/file'); // /foo/bar/a/b/c/file
mod.resolveLoose('a/b/c/file'); // /foo/bar/a/b/c/file
mod.resolveLoose('random/path'); // /foo/bar/random/path

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Version

1.0.1

License

MIT

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  • gagle