π¦ Molt
[!WARNING]
Molt is still being developed actively. The API is not stable yet and may change frequently.
Molt is a Deno module to bump semvers in import specifiers, like udd, but with a few different goals:
Consistent - Molt uses deno_graph for dependency resolution, and βexploitsβ redirects of fetch requests, to get latest semvers. This should make it support as many module registries as Deno runtime does, with a minimum maintainance cost.
Module-first - The core logic is provided as versatile functions in a Deno module, which enables you to write the best scripts for your use cases.
Git-friendly - The operations can be easily divided into logical groups for subsequent git commits. A submodule and CLI for git operations are also provided.
Usage
Deno Module
API Reference (WIP)
- mod.ts - Main module
- git.ts - Sub-module for Git operations
- lib/uri.ts - Library for handling URIs
Examples
Update all dependencies in a module and write the changes to local files
import {
DependencyUpdate,
FileUpdate,
} from "https://deno.land/x/molt@{VERSION}/mod.ts";
const updates = await DependencyUpdate.collect("./mod.ts", {
importMap: "./deno.json",
});
const results = await FileUpdate.collect(updates);
await FileUpdate.writeAll(results);
Update all dependencies in a module and commit the changes to local git repository
import { DependencyUpdate } from "https://deno.land/x/molt@{VERSION}/mod.ts";
import { commitAll } from "https://deno.land/x/molt@{VERSION}/git.ts";
const updates = await DependencyUpdate.collect("./mod.ts");
await commitAll(updates, {
groupBy: (dependency) => dependency.name,
composeCommitMessage: ({ group, version }) =>
`build(deps): bump <span class="katex"><span class="katex-mathml"><math xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML"><semantics><mrow><mrow><mi>g</mi><mi>r</mi><mi>o</mi><mi>u</mi><mi>p</mi></mrow><mi>t</mi><mi>o</mi></mrow><annotation encoding="application/x-tex">{group} to </annotation></semantics></math></span><span class="katex-html" aria-hidden="true"><span class="base"><span class="strut" style="height:0.8095em;vertical-align:-0.1944em;"></span><span class="mord"><span class="mord mathnormal" style="margin-right:0.03588em;">g</span><span class="mord mathnormal">ro</span><span class="mord mathnormal">u</span><span class="mord mathnormal">p</span></span><span class="mord mathnormal">t</span><span class="mord mathnormal">o</span></span></span></span>{version!.to}`,
});
CLI
Although we encourage you to write your own scripts, a pre-built CLI tool is
also provided as cli.ts
for convenience or a reference implementation, which
is supposed to cover most of the use cases.
Installation (optional)
The molt CLI can be installed globally with the following command, for example:
deno install --allow-env --allow-read --allow-write --allow-net --allow-run=git,deno\
--name molt https://deno.land/x/molt@{VERSION}/cli.ts
Alternatively, you may prefer to run the remote script directly through
deno task
for better security or reproducibility:
{
"tasks": {
"run:molt": "deno run --allow-env --allow-read --allow-write=. --allow-run=git,deno --allow-net=deno.land https://deno.land/x/molt@{VERSION}/cli.ts",
"update": "deno task -q run:molt check ./**/*.ts",
"update:commit": "deno task -q run:molt update --commit --pre-commit=test ./**/*.ts"",
},
}
Update dependencies interactively
The most interactive interface is provided as check
sub-command of cli.ts
.
Run molt check --help
for more details.
molt check [...options] <...entrypoints>
[!Note]
Molt CLI automatically uses import maps defined indeno.json
ordeno.jsonc
if available.
You canβt, however, use import maps as entrypoints.
Example: Just check
> molt check test/fixtures/direct-import/mod.ts
π Checking for updates...
π‘ Found updates:
π¦ node-emoji 1.0.0 => 2.1.0
test/fixtures/mod.ts 1.0.0
π¦ deno.land/x/deno_graph 0.50.0 => 0.55.0
src/fixtures/mod.ts 0.50.0
π¦ deno.land/std 0.200.0 => 0.202.0
src/fixtures/mod.ts 0.200.0
src/fixtures/lib.ts 0.200.0
? Choose an action βΊ Abort
>
Example: Write changes to files
> molt check test/fixtures/direct-import/mod.ts
π Checking for updates...
π‘ Found updates:
...
? Choose an action βΊ Write changes to local files
πΎ src/fixtures/mod.ts
πΎ src/fixtures/lib.ts
>
Example: Commit changes to git
> deno run --allow-env --allow-net --allow-read --allow-write=. --allow-run=git\
https://deno.land/x/molt/cli.ts check src/fixtures/mod.ts
π Checking for updates...
π‘ Found updates:
...
? Choose an action βΊ Commit changes to git
? Prefix for commit messages (build(deps):) βΊ build(deps):
? Tasks to run before each commit (comma separated) βΊ lock, test
? Tasks to run after each commit (comma separated) βΊ
π build(deps): update deno.land/std from 0.200.0 to 0.202.0
π build(deps): update deno.land/x/deno_graph from 0.50.0 to 0.55.0
π build(deps): update node-emoji from 1.0.0 to 2.1.0
>
Update dependencies non-interactively
The update
sub-command of cli.ts
is designed to be used in non-interactive
environments, such as CI/CD pipelines. Run molt update --help
for more
details.
Example: Update dependencies and write changes to files
molt update <...entrypoints>
Example: Update dependencies and commit changes to git
molt update --commit --pre-commit=check,test <...entrypoints>
Limitations
The following limitations are imposed by the design of Molt:
- Dependencies are always updated to the latest version. No version constraints are supported.
- Dependencies in import specifiers are only targeted.
See issues for other known limitations.
References
Molt is inspired by prior works such as
and of full respect to the authors.