Analyzes and walks down the dependencies from a commonjs entry and creates a walking tree.
var walker = require('commonjs-walker');NOTICE that it will not walk down node_modules and any foreign packages.
require()a directory.- If a module is not found, commonjs-walker will attempt to load the required filename with the added extension of
.js,.json, and then.node, according to File Modules - You can define what extensions should commonjs-walker fallback to by options.extensions, which will be very usefull for browser-side commonjs modules.
walker(options)
.walk('/path/to/entry.js')
// walk down another entry
.walk('/path/to/entry2.js')
// walk down many entries
.walk(['/path/to/entry3.js', '/path/to/entry4.js'])
.done(function(err, nodes){
// ...
});Returns an EventEmitter.
Walks down from a entry point, such as package.main of commonjs or any JavaScript file based on CommonJS, and tries to create a walker.Module instance of the top level.
- entry
Paththe absolute path of the entry point. - nodes
Objectthe hashmap of<path>: <walker.Module>
If the file structure of your project is (actually it is a very extreme scenario):
/path/to
|-- index.js
|-- a.png
|-- a
|-- index.json
index.js:
require('./a');
require('b');
var image = require.resolve('./a.png')a/index.json
{}Code:
walker().walk('/path/to/index.js').done(function(err, nodes){
console.log(nodes);
});Then, the nodes object will be something like:
{
'/path/to/index.js': {
require: {
'./a': '/path/to/a/index.json',
'b': 'b'
},
resolve: {
'./a.png': '/path/to/a.png'
},
content: <buffer>
},
'/path/to/a.png': {
require: {}
}
'/path/to/a/index.json': {
require: {},
content: <buffer>
},
'b': {
foreign: true
}
}All options are optional. By default, walker works in a very strict mode.
| Option | Type | Default | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
| allow_cyclic | Boolean |
true | whether should check cyclic dependencies |
| check_require_length | Boolean |
false | whether should check the arguments.length of method require() |
| allow_non_literal_require | Boolean |
true | whether should check the usage of method require(). If false, the argument of require() must be an literal string. |
| comment_require | Boolean |
true | whether should parse @require(), @require.resolve and @require.async in comments. |
| require_resolve | Boolean |
true | whether should analysis the usage of require.resolve(). |
| require_async | Boolean |
true | whether should record the usage of require.async(). |
| allow_absolute_path | Boolean |
true | whether should allow to require an absolute path. |
| extensions | Array |
['.js', '.json', '.node'] |
see options.extensions section |
type Array
When we require() a path, if path is not found, nodejs will attempt to load the required filename with the added extension of .js, .json, and then .node. Reference via
But for browser-side environment, most usually, we do not support extension .node which is what options.extensions is for.
Especially, only tree values below are allowed:
['.js']['.js', '.json'],['.js', '.json', '.node']
{
allow_cyclic: false,
strict_require: true,
allow_absolute_path: false,
extensions: ['.js', '.json']
}Register compilers to precompile a file
- compiler
- compiler.test
RegExp|Stringto match the given path - compiler.compiler
function(content, options, callback)- callback
function(err, result)- err
Error=null - result.content
Stringthe compiled content. - result.js
Boolean=falseto indicate that if the compiled content is an javascript file. - result.json
Boolean=falseto indicate that if the compiled content is a json file.
- err
- callback
- compiler.test
- message
String
Emits if there is a warning. Warnings are potential problems that might break your code, including:
- cyclic dependencies
- require an absolute path
Actually, there is no walker.Module exists. We only use it to declare and describe the structure of the module.
| Property | Type | Description |
|---|---|---|
| foreign | Boolean |
whether the current module is from a foreign package. |
| require | Object |
The <id>: <path> map. id is the module identifier user require()d in the module file. |
| resolve | Object |
|
| async | Object |
- code
Stringthe enum type of the error - message
Stringerror messages - stack
Stringthe origin error.stack - data
Objectthe object of the major information of the error, this is useful for i18n.

