Package management for deno (pronounced "tee rex")
Trex is a package management tool for deno similar to npm but keeping close to
the deno philosophy. Packages are cached and only one import_map.json file is
generated.
// import_map.json
{
"imports": {
"http/": "https://deno.land/std/http/"
}
}For more information about the import maps in deno see import maps.
deno install -A --unstable --import-map=https://deno.land/x/trex/import_map.json -n trex --no-check https://deno.land/x/trex/cli.tsNote: Works with deno >= 1.10.2
We shorten the install command so it's not that long
The permissions that Trex uses are:
--allow-net--allow-read--allow-write--allow-run--allow-env
You can give those permissions explicitly.
Install new version with the -f flag:
deno install -f -A --unstable --import-map=https://deno.land/x/trex/import_map.json -n trex --no-check https://deno.land/x/trex/cli.tsOr use the upgrade command:
trex upgradeNote: available for versions 0.2.0 or higher.
Note: to try the latest pre-release features, use the
--canaryflag.
Verify the installation of Trex:
trex --versionThe console should print the Trex version.
For help on the commands that Trex provides, use:
trex --helpUse the --map flag to install packages from the Standard Library (std) and those hosted at deno.land/x.
Install the fs, http and fmt modules from std:
trex install --map fs http fmtNote: you can also use the shorthand
i, as in:trex i --map fs http fmt
Use the --nest flag and specify an explicit version to install packages hosted on nest.land.
trex install --nest [pkg]@[version]trex install --nest [email protected]trex i --nest [email protected]You can install std packages from nest.land by specifying the package and version:
trex install --nest [email protected]trex install --pkg [user]/[repo or repo@tag/branch]/[path/to/file] [packageName]trex install --pkg oakserver/oak@main/mod.ts oakWarning: In the event that the repository uses a branch other than master as the main branch, this must be specified!
The above downloads oak directly from its repository.
All installation methods produce an import_map.json file:
{
"imports": {
"fs/": "https://deno.land/std/fs/",
"http/": "https://deno.land/std/http/",
"fmt/": "https://deno.land/std/fmt/"
}
}Download all the packages listed in the import_map.json similar to
npm install:
trex installInstall a package from a custom URL source:
trex --custom React=https://dev.jspm.io/react/index.jstrex delete ReactRemove a specific version from the cache and the import_map.json file:
trex delete [email protected]// import_map.json
{
"imports": {
"fs/": "https://deno.land/std/fs/",
"http/": "https://deno.land/std/http/",
"fmt/": "https://deno.land/std/fmt/",
"oak": "https://deno.land/x/oak/mod.ts"
}
}Note: Removing from cache only works with packages from
stdanddeno.land/x
Specify a package's version:
trex install --map [email protected]// import_map.json
{
"imports": {
"fs/": "https://deno.land/[email protected]/fs/"
}
}Note: can be used with third party packages.
trex checkWarning: Currently limited to packages from
deno.land/stdanddeno.land/x, in future versions this will support third party registries and CDN sources as well.
You can create command aliases, similar to deno task or npm run.
Simply create a run.json file with the following structure:
{
"scripts": {
"welcome": "deno run https://deno.land/[email protected]/examples/welcome.ts"
}
}You can call a command from within another, or call a script like denopack
or eggs update from within a command alias:
// run.json
{
"scripts": {
"start": "trex run welcome",
"welcome": "deno run https://deno.land/[email protected]/examples/welcome.ts",
"dev": "denon run ./app.ts",
"build": "aleph build",
"update": "eggs update"
}
}Then, for example, to update your dependencies:
trex run updateThis will execute
eggs update
When the command trex install or trex i executed, you can perform actions
before and after the execution of trex install.
Execution order:
preinstallinstallpostinstall
// run.json
{
"scripts": {
"start": "trex run welcome",
"welcome": "deno run https://deno.land/[email protected]/examples/welcome.ts",
"dev": "denon run ./app.ts",
"build": "aleph build",
"preinstall": "deno --version",
"postinstall": "deno test --unstable"
}
}Note: you can use the --watch flag to monitor the changes and rerun the script, example:
deno run --watch --unstable https://deno.land/[email protected]/examples/welcome.tsYou can provide arguments when calling the command alias. These will be passed to the file to execute:
trex run start --port=3000 --envconsole.log(Deno.args); // ["--port=3000", "--env"]With trex you can create script aliases that reload every time a file is
changed, similar to running deno with the --watch flag.
The Reboot Script Alias Protocol (RSAP) provides this same functionality.
Just add a files property to your run.json file, specifying an array
of files that will be watched. When changes are detected in those files,
your script aliases will be restarted immediately.
// run.json
{
"scripts": {
"start": "trex run welcome",
"dev": "denon run ./app.ts",
"build": "aleph build"
},
"files": ["./app.ts"]
}You only have to add the files option in the run.json file and it will only
observe the files and folders that you specify, if you leave the array empty it
will observe all the files.
// run.json
{
"scripts": {
"dev": "go build"
},
"files": ["./main.go"]
}For the script alias to use rsap you just need to add the --watch or -w
flag to the end of the command alias:
trex run dev --watch [...args]It can be used with any CLI tool, compiler or interpreter.
- scripts:
dev: go build
- files:
- ./main.goA limitation of watch mode is that they do not restart the processes that never end (such as http servers). In those cases we recommend other alternatives, such as denon.
Trex will auto detect cli file in the order of "cli.ts", "cli.js", "%pacakge-name%.ts", "%package-name%.js", "main.ts", "main.js", "mod.ts", "mod.js", "index.ts", "index.js". If you want to publish a cli package, name your cli file as either of above(e.g.
cli.ts) in your root package.
trex exec allows you to run many cli tools hosted at deno.land/x
trex exec aleph init hello_worldtrex will fetch aleph's cli and run without installing it locally using
deno install, you can also specify the version you want to use.
trex exec [email protected] init hello_worldYou can also specify the permissions that the cli will use.
Just pass the --perms flag followed by comma-separated permissions:
trex exec --perms env,read,write,net denon run ./app.tsenv: --allow-envwrite: --allow-writeread: --allow-readnet: --allow-netrun: --allow-runreload: --reloadplugin: --allow-pluginhrtime: --allow-hrtimeA: --allow-all
Warning: if you don't specify the permissions, they are all automatically granted to you
You can also combine this with the command alias:
// run.json
{
"scripts": {
"denon": "trex exec denon run"
},
"files": ["./app.ts"]
}trex run denon ./app.tsAnd yes, you can do this:
trex exec trex exec trex exec ....Even this:
trex exec land trex exec land trex exec ....This functionality is heavily inspired by
npx and
land. If you need another alternative to trex exec
to use in deno, land this is a great option.
When you work with import maps trex by default will handle everything using an import_map.json file, but what if I want to use an import-map.json or an importMap.json instead?
That's what the global settings are for! Basically it allows you to change the behavior of trex, with respect to the file where the dependencies will be handled.
trex global-config --importMap=import-map.jsonThis will change the default name from import_map.json to import-map.json. to obtain the name or format used you must execute the following command.
trex global-config --getImportMapBut what happens if I am working with several people on the same project and we
have different configurations? For these cases there is the local configuration
or local configuration file - trex.config.json:
// trex.config.json
{
"importMap": "importMap.json"
}This will tell trex that the format for the import map will be the one dictated by the config file. This allows that there are no problems with the different local configurations of each developer since the configuration file only affects the scope of the project.
Note: the file
trex.config.jsonmust be at the same level(scope) as the import map for trex to detect it.
Thee hierarchy that trex respects with the configurations is the following:
graph TD
trex.config.json --> LocalGlobalConfig
LocalGlobalConfig --> defaultTrexConfig
If you want delete a package or url package from cache memory in deno, you can
use the purge command to remove from cache memory.
trex purge oakThis finds the oak package in the import_map.json, and removes it from the
cache.
trex purge https://deno.land/x/[email protected]/mod.tstrex tree fsThis prints out something like:
local: C:\Users\trex\AppData\Local\deno\deps\https\deno.land\434fe4a7be02d1875....
type: TypeScript
compiled: C:\Users\trex\AppData\Local\deno\gen\https\deno.land\std\fs\mod.ts.js
map: C:\Users\trex\AppData\Local\deno\gen\https\deno.land\std\fs\mod.ts.js.map
deps:
https://deno.land/std/fs/mod.ts
βββ¬ https://deno.land/std/fs/empty_dir.ts
β βββ¬ https://deno.land/std/path/mod.ts
β βββ https://deno.land/std/path/_constants.ts
β βββ¬ https://deno.land/std/path/win32.ts
β β βββ https://deno.land/std/path/_constants.ts
β β βββ¬ https://deno.land/std/path/_util.ts
β β β βββ https://deno.land/std/path/_constants.ts
β β βββ https://deno.land/std/_util/assert.ts
β βββ¬ https://deno.land/std/path/posix.ts
β β βββ https://deno.land/std/path/_constants.ts
β β βββ https://deno.land/std/path/_util.ts
β βββ¬ https://deno.land/std/path/common.ts
β β βββ¬ https://deno.land/std/path/separator.ts
β β βββ https://deno.land/std/path/_constants.ts
β βββ https://deno.land/std/path/separator.ts
β βββ https://deno.land/std/path/_interface.ts
β βββ¬ https://deno.land/std/path/glob.ts
β βββ https://deno.land/std/path/separator.ts
β βββ¬ https://deno.land/std/path/_globrex.ts
β β βββ https://deno.land/std/path/_constants.ts
β βββ https://deno.land/std/path/mod.ts
β βββ https://deno.land/std/_util/assert.ts
βββ¬ https://deno.land/std/fs/ensure_dir.ts
# ... full response was truncated for brevityLet's say your module depends on a remote module. When you compile your module for the first time, it is retrieved, compiled and cached. It will remain this way until you run your module on a new machine (e.g. in production) or reload the cache.
But what happens if the content in the remote url is changed? This could lead to your production module running with different dependency code than your local module. Deno's solution to avoid this is to use integrity checking and lock files.
Create a lockfile:
deno cache --lock=lock.json --lock-write file.tsThe above generates a lock.json file.
If you use import_map.json in input file, you can specify it:
deno cache --lock=lock.json --lock-write --import-map=import_map.json --unstable file.tsSee deno document for more info.
trex install --map http fmt// server.ts
import { serve } from "http/server.ts";
import { green } from "fmt/colors.ts";
const server = serve({ port: 8000 });
console.log(green("http://localhost:8000/"));
for await (const req of server) {
req.respond({ body: "Hello World\n" });
}deno run --allow-net --import-map=import_map.json --unstable server.tsWarning: it is important to use --import-map=import_map.json --unstable
Adding third-party packages: Example using oak
trex i --map oakThis adds oak to the import_map.json file:
{
"imports": {
"http/": "https://deno.land/std/http/",
"fmt/": "https://deno.land/std/fmt/",
"oak": "https://deno.land/x/oak/mod.ts"
}
}Note the import statement, thanks to the import_map.json addition:
// app.ts
import { Application } from "oak";
const app = new Application();
app.use((ctx) => {
ctx.response.body = "Hello World!";
});
await app.listen({ port: 8000 });deno run --allow-net --import-map=import_map.json --unstable app.tsWarning: it is important to use --import-map=import_map.json --unstable
Contributions are welcome, see CONTRIBUTING GUIDELINES.
Trex is licensed under the MIT license.