Deno Module Manager
dmm
(pronounced “Dim”) is a Deno module manager. Updating your dependencies within deps.ts
and checking if new versions are available hasn’t been easier.
dmm
will read your imported/exported modules that sit inside your deps.ts
and check them against their latest version if you ask it to, and update them if you want it to.
Contents
Features
- Zero dependencies
- Easy and simple to use
- Checks dependencies for newer versions
- Will update your dependencies for you
- Gives information on modules
- Accounts for 3rd party and
std
modules - Installation is optional
- Will be kept up to date and maintained consistently
- No variants of
node_modules
andpackage.json
- No extra configuration around import maps
Quick Start
There are two ways you can use this module: installing it though deno
, or running it though a URL.
As dmm only needs to read and write to your deps.ts
, as well as requiring network access for reading Deno’s database.json
, you can restrict the access this module has.
Install
$ deno install --allow-net --allow-read --allow-write https://deno.land/x/dmm@v1.1.1/mod.ts
$ dmm ...
Through the URL
If you are using this method, be sure to use the latest version of dmm in the command below
$ deno run <permissions> https://deno.land/x/dmm@v1.1.1/mod.ts ...
In the examples below, dmm is installed and we will be using it that way to make the commands easier to read.
Example
In this example, we are going to run through every step of dmm. We will be checking dependencies, updating them, and getting information about certain ones.
Step 1 - Info
Say I want to get information about the fmt module:
$ dmm info fmt
Information on fmt
- Name: fmt
- Description: Cannot retrieve descriptions for std modules
- deno.land Link: https://deno.land/std@0.61.0/fmt
- GitHub Repository: https://github.com/denoland/deno/tree/master/std/fmt
- Import Statement: import * as fmt from "https://deno.land/std@0.61.0/fmt";
- Latest Version: 0.61.0
Step 2 - Adding fmt
as a dependency to use colors
Along with my current dependencies, I decided to import the colors
sub-module of fmt
in my deps.ts
file:
export { Drash } from "https://deno.land/x/drash@v1.0.0/mod.ts"; // out of date
import * as fs from "https://deno.land/std@0.53.0/fs/mod.ts"; // out of date
import * as colors from "https://deno.land/std@0.61.0/fmt/colors.ts"; // up to date
export { fs, colors }
Take notice of the out of date dependencies.
Step 3 - Check
Now we want to check if any of our dependencies need updating, but we don’t want to update them yet.
$ dmm check
...
drash can be updated from v1.0.0 to v1.0.7
fs can be updated from 0.53.0 to 0.61.0
...
Step 4 - Update
Lets update our dependencies as some are out of date:
$ dmm update
...
drash was updated from v1.0.0 to v1.0.7
fs was updated from 0.53.0 to 0.61.0
...
Now lets check the deps.ts
file, and you will notice the versions have been modified:
export { Drash } from "https://deno.land/x/drash@v1.0.7/mod.ts"; // was out of date
import * as fs from "https://deno.land/std@0.61.0/fs/mod.ts"; // was out of date
import * as colors from "https://deno.land/std@0.61.0/fmt/colors.ts";
export { fs, colors }
Step 5 - Help
Should you need any more information, use the --help
option:
$ dmm --help
A module manager for Deno.
USAGE:
deno run --allow-read --allow-net [--allow-write] https://deno.land/x/dmm@v1.1.1/mod.ts [ARGS] [MODULES]
dmm [ARGS] [MODULES]
ARGUMENTS:
The check and update arguments cannot be used together.
check
Checks the specified modules for newer version. Will check all if modules are omitted.
update
Updates the specified modules to the newest version. Will update all if modules are omitted.
info
Shows information about the given module, be it std or 3rd party. The 3rd party module must be referenced at https://deno.land/x/
OPTIONS:
--help
Prints help message
--version
Prints dmm version
EXAMPLE USAGE:
Assume you are importing an out of date version of `fs` from `std`.
deno run --allow-net --allow-read https://deno.land/x/dmm@v1.1.1/mod.ts check fs
deno run --allow-net --allow-read --allow-write https://deno.land/x/dmm@v1.1.1/mod.ts update fs
deno run --allow-net https://deno.land/x/dmm@v1.1.1/mod.ts info http
dmm info http
How it Works
dmm will only read modules that reside on deno.land, whether they are 3rd party or std
modules. As long as you are either importing then exporting a module, or only exporting a module, dmm will check that dependency.
Your dependencies must be versioned. Not versioning your dependencies is bad practice and can lead to many problems in your project, which is why dmm will not support it. For example:
import { red } from "https://deno.land/std@0.56.0/fmt/colors.ts"; ^^^^^^^
dmm only supports importing/exporting modules from Deno’s registry: deno.land, 3rd party or
std
. For example:import { red } from "https://deno.land/std@0.56.0/fmt/colors.ts"; // supported import { something } from "https://deno.land/x/something@0v1.0.0/mod.ts"; // supported
dmm will only pull 3rd party dependencies where the entrypoint file is
mod.ts
, as this follows best practicedmm will read every
from "https://deno.land/..."
line in yourdeps.ts
and using the name and version, will convert the dependencies into objects.dmm will then retrieve the rest of the required information for later use for each module:
- Latest version - for 3rd party modules, it’s taken from using the GitHub API for Deno’s
database.json
file. Forstd
modules, it’s taken fromhttps://deno.land/std/@<latest version>/version.ts
- GitHub URL - Retrieved through the GitHub API
- Description - For 3rd party modules, it is also taken from reading Deno’s
database.json
file, which holds all modules that display on https://deno.land/x/
- Latest version - for 3rd party modules, it’s taken from using the GitHub API for Deno’s
After this, dmm will un different actions based on the purpose:
check
Will compare the version you are using of a module with the latest one
update
If the latest version is more recent than the one you use for a given module, dmm will update the version in your
deps.ts
fileinfo
Displays information about the given module using information collated at the start of the script
Contributing
Contributors are welcomed!
Please read through our contributing guidelines. Included are directions for opening issues, coding standards, and notes on development.
License
By contributing your code, you agree to license your contribution under the MIT License.