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@/twine

NPM

A tool for distributing binary artifacts for Node.js native addons.

Introduction

Twine is entirely convention based which allows the tool to be extremely minimal and easy to set up. The artifact uploaded/downloaded will be based on inferred properties of the environment Twine is run from.

Artifacts are named in the following manner:

// pkg is your package JSON
// buildType is Debug or Release
`${pkg.name}@${pkg.version}.${process.platform}-${process.arch}-${buildType}.zip`

Each artifact consists of a Zip archive of the contents of build/Debug or build/Release, depending on the build type.

Twine will also automatically skip building when you run npm install from within your working copy during development.

Usage

Add the following scripts to your package.json:

"scripts": {
    "install": "twine install",
    "twine:publish": "twine publish",
    "build:native": "<your native build command here>"
}

Also add a "twine" section to your package.json:

"twine": {
    "distributionUrl": "https://my-downloads.example.com",
    "moduleName": "my-native-addon"  // ie: as in build/Release/my-native-addon.node
}

To publish an artifact, first build your module:

npm run build:native

You would then want to do any testing or other validation on the resulting build.

Add a .env file in your project root, or provide the equivalent environment variables to the publish command. Important: Make sure .env is excluded from version control and publishing using .gitignore AND .npmignore.

S3_ACCESS_KEY_ID=...
S3_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY=...
S3_BUCKET=my-bucket-name
S3_ENDPOINT=https://my-s3-endpoint.example.com

Note, if you are using AWS S3, S3_ENDPOINT should be https://s3.<region>.amazonaws.com.

  • Do not include the bucket name in this URL.

Now publish your build using twine:

npm run twine:publish

Using subfolders

If you wish to publish artifacts into a specific folder (and download from that folder), you can do so by modifying your twine.distributionUrl and specifying the S3_FOLDER environment variable while publishing, like so:

"twine": {
    "distributionUrl": "https://my-downloads.example.com/my-project",
    "moduleName": "my-project"
}
S3_FOLDER=my-project

This works with multiple levels of folders, for instance S3_FOLDER=my-org/my-project/my-branch provided that you ensure distributionUrl matches.

Distributing artifacts inline

Twine supports distributing artifacts inline within your NPM package. Twine will look for artifacts within the .twine folder, and if a matching one exists, it will be unpacked to the appropriate location within the build/ folder during install-time.

You can download all existing prebuilt artifacts from your distribution server using twine pack. If you wish to enforce that only packed artifacts will be used at installation time, you can set the twine.packOnly property in your package.json to true.

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A tool for distributing binary artifacts for Node.js native addons

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