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 packlist = require('npm-packlist') const tar = require('tar') const packageDir = '/path/to/package' const packageTarball = '/path/to/package.tgz' packlist({ path: packageDir }) .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:
If a package.json file is found, and it has a files list,
then ignore everything that isn't in files. Always include the
readme, license, notice, changes, changelog, and history files, if
they exist, and the package.json file itself.
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.
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.
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.
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:
.*.swp, ._* and .*.orig files.npmrc files (these may contain private configs)node_modules/.bin folder/build/config.gypi and .lock-wscript.DS_Store files because wtf are those evennpm-debug.log files at the root of a projectYou can explicitly re-include any of these with a files list in
package.json or a negated ignore file rule.
Same API as ignore-walk, just hard-coded file list and rule sets.
The Walker and WalkerSync classes take a bundled argument, which
is a list of package names to include from node_modules. When calling
the top-level packlist() and packlist.sync() functions, this
module calls into npm-bundled directly.