This clean-package
tool is used for removing development configuration from 'package.json' before publishing the package to NPM.
npm install clean-package --save-dev
The clean-package
tool works directly on the 'package.json' file, to avoid breaking the NPM lifecycle. This allows you to add a script to the 'package.json' to clean the file during packing.
{
"name": "my-package",
"version": "1.0.0",
"scripts": {
"prepack": "clean-package",
"postpack": "clean-package restore"
}
}
When the "prepack" script executes, a backup of the original package.json
will be created. Ensure this file doesn't make it into your release package.
One way to accomplish this is to add the following to your .npmignore
file:
*.backup
See CLI Usage for independent usage instructions.
Options can be configured in clean-package.config.json
at the root of your project (where the package.json
is).
{
"indent": 2,
"remove": [
"eslintConfig",
"jest"
]
}
Alternatively, you can choose to specify your configuration from within package.json
using the clean-package
key like so:
{
"name": "my-package",
"version": "1.0.0",
"clean-package": {
"indent": 2,
"remove": [
"eslintConfig",
"jest"
]
},
// Or, a file path to a configuration.
"clean-package": "./build/clean-package.config.js"
}
You can also create the configuration using JavaScript in the clean-package.config.?(c|m)js
at the root of your project:
module.exports = {
indent: '\t',
replace: {
'config.port': '8080'
}
};
- backupPath
-
Type:
String
Default:'./package.json.backup'
- Specifies the location and filename to which the
package.json
will be backed up. - indent
-
Type:
String | Number
Default:2
-
Defines the indentation that's used to format the cleaned
package.json
. See thespace
parameter ofJSON.stringify
for more information. - remove
-
Type:
String[] | (keys: String[]) => String[]
-
Specifies the keys to be removed from the cleaned
package.json
; otherwise,null
when nothing is to be removed.Deeper keys can be accessed using a dot (e.g.,
'key.keyInsideKey'
). Likewise, arrays are accessible using brackets (e.g.,'key.arrKey[0]'
).To remove keys that contain a dot, the dot must be escaped. For example,
'exports.\\.'
will target"exports": { "." }
- replace
-
Type:
Object | (pairs: Object) => Object
-
Specifies the keys to be replaced in the cleaned
package.json
; otherwise,null
when nothing is to be replaced.Deeper keys and arrays are accessible in the same manner and allow dot escaping. Additionally, the replaced keys may receive any valid JSON value, including objects.
- extends
-
Type:
String | String[]
-
Specifies the name/s of a shareable configuration.
This package shares a configuration with common settings that can be extended from
clean-package/common
. - onClean
-
Type:
(hasChanged: boolean, config: CompiledConfig) => void
- Notified after the
package.json
has been cleaned, supplied with an indication as to whether there were changes and the compiled configuration. - onRestore
-
Type:
(hasChanged: boolean, config: CompiledConfig) => void
- Notified after the
package.json
has been restored, supplied with an indication as to whether there were changes and the compiled configuration.
clean-package [[<source-path>] <backup-path>] [<option>...]
where <option> is one of:
-c, --config <path> Specify the path to a configuration file.
-e, --extends <name>... Specify the name to a shareable configuration. (e.g. 'clean-package/common')
-i, --indent <value> Specify the indentation, overriding configuration from file.
-rm, --remove <key>... Specify the keys to remove, overriding configuration from file.
--remove-add <key>... Same as --remove without overriding configuration from file.
-r, --replace <key>=<value>... Specify the keys to replace, overriding configuration from file.
--replace-add <key>=<value>... Same as --replace without overriding configuration from file.
--print-config Print the combined configuration without executing command.
-v, --version Print the version number
clean-package restore [[<source-path>] <backup-path>] [<option>...]
alias: r
where <option> is one of:
-c, --config <path> Specify the path to a configuration file.
-e, --extends <name>... Specify the name to a shareable configuration. (e.g. 'clean-package/common')
--print-config Print the combined configuration without executing command.
Should you desire, it is also possible to interface this package through code. Simply import the package like any other.
import { load, clean, restore, version } from 'clean-package';
If you're integrating clean-package
into the NPM lifecycle, removing all the package.json
scripts with clean-package
will also remove them from the current execution. This is just how NPM works.
For example, this configuration will remove the postpack
script before it is ever requested by npm pack
or npm publish
, thereby effectively removing the event from the executing lifecycle.
{
"scripts": {
"prepack": "clean-package",
"postpack": "clean-package restore"
},
"clean-package": {
"remove": [
"clean-package",
"scripts"
]
}
}
There are multiple ways to work around this (more than are offered here). One solution might be to manually run the command with npx clean-package restore
. Another might be to define a custom script that would call pack
and clean-package
in sequence:
{
"scripts": {
"prepack": "clean-package",
"new:pack": "npm pack && clean-package restore",
"new:publish": "npm publish && clean-package restore"
}
}