A tool for managing JavaScript projects with multiple packages.
Splitting up large codebases into separate independently versioned packages is extremely useful for code sharing. However, making changes across many repositories is messy and difficult to track, and testing across repositories gets complicated really fast.
To solve these (and many other) problems, some projects will organize their codebases into multi-package repositories (sometimes called monorepos). Projects like Babel, React, Angular, Ember, Meteor, Jest, and many others develop all of their packages within a single repository.
Lerna is a tool that optimizes the workflow around managing multi-package repositories with git and npm.
There's actually very little to it. You have a file system that looks like this:
my-lerna-repo/
package.json
packages/
package-1/
package.json
package-2/
package.json
The two primary commands in Lerna are lerna bootstrap
and lerna publish
.
bootstrap
will link dependencies in the repo together.
publish
will help publish any updated packages.
The instructions below are for Lerna 2.x which is currently in beta. We recommend using it instead of 1.x for a new Lerna project. Check the wiki if you need to see the 1.x README.
Let's start by installing Lerna globally with npm.
# install the latest 2.x version using the `prerelease` dist-tag
$ npm install --global lerna@prerelease
# install version directly
$ npm install --global lerna@^2.0.0-beta
Next we'll create a new git repository:
$ git init lerna-repo
$ cd lerna-repo
And now let's turn it into a Lerna repo:
$ lerna init
Your repository should now look like this:
lerna-repo/
packages/
package.json
lerna.json
This will create a lerna.json
configuration file as well as a packages
folder.
Lerna allows you to manage your project using one of two modes: Fixed or Independent.
Fixed mode Lerna projects operate on a single version line. The version is kept in the lerna.json
file at the root of your project under the version
key. When you run lerna publish
, if a module has been updated since the last time a release was made, it will be updated to the new version you're releasing. This means that you only publish a new version of a package when you need to.
This is the mode that Babel is currently using. Use this if you want to automatically tie all package versions together. One issue with this approach is that a major change in any package will result in all packages having a new major version.
Independent mode Lerna projects allows maintainers to increment package versions independently of each other. Each time you publish, you will get a prompt for each package that has changed to specify if it's a patch, minor, major or custom change.
Independent mode allows you to more specifically update versions for each package and makes sense for a group of components. Combining this mode with something like semantic-release would make it less painful. (There is work on this already at atlassian/lerna-semantic-release.
The
version
key inlerna.json
is ignored in independent mode.
$ lerna init
Create a new Lerna repo or upgrade an existing repo to the current version of Lerna.
Lerna assumes the repo has already been initialized with
git init
.
When run, this command will:
- Add
lerna
as adevDependency
inpackage.json
if it doesn't already exist. - Create a
lerna.json
config file to store theversion
number. - Create a
packages
directory if it hasn't been created already.
Example output on a new git repo:
> lerna init
$ Lerna v2.0.0-beta.18
$ Creating packages directory.
$ Updating package.json.
$ Creating lerna.json.
$ Successfully created Lerna files
$ lerna publish --independent
This flag tells Lerna to use independent versioning mode.
$ lerna bootstrap
Bootstrap - or setup - the packages in the current Lerna repo. Installs all of their dependencies and links any cross-dependencies.
When run, this command will:
- Link together all Lerna
packages
that are dependencies of each other. - This doesn't currently use npm link and instead uses a proxy to the actual package in the monorepo.
npm install
all external dependencies of each package.
Currently, what Lerna does to link internal dependencies is replace the
node_modules/package-x
with a link to the actual file in the repo.
lerna bootstrap
respects the --ignore
flag (see below).
Let's use babel
as an example.
babel-generator
andsource-map
(among others) are dependencies ofbabel-core
.babel-core
'spackage.json
lists both these packages as keys independencies
, as shown below.
// babel-core package.json
{
"name": "babel-core",
...
"dependencies": {
...
"babel-generator": "^6.9.0",
...
"source-map": "^0.5.0"
}
}
- Lerna checks if each dependency is also part of the Lerna repo.
- In this example,
babel-generator
is a dependency, whilesource-map
is not. source-map
isnpm install
ed like normal.
- In this example,
babel-core/node_modules/babel-generator
is replaced with two files:- A
package.json
with keysname
andversion
- An
index.js
file with the contentsmodule.exports = require("relative-path-to-babel-generator-in-the-lerna-repo")
- A
- This links the
babel-generator
package innode_modules
with the actualbabel-generator
files.
$ lerna publish
Publish packages in the current Lerna project. When run, this command does the following:
Creates a new release of the packages that have been updated. Prompts for a new version. Creates a new git commit/tag in the process of publishing to npm.
More specifically, this command will:
- Publish each module in
packages
that has been updated since the last version to npm with the dist-taglerna-temp
. - Run the equivalent of
lerna updated
to determine which packages need to be published. - If necessary, increment the
version
key inlerna.json
. - Update the
package.json
of all updated packages to their new versions. - Update all dependencies of the updated packages with the new versions.
- Create a new git commit and tag for the new version.
- Publish updated packages to npm.
- Once all packages have been published, remove the
lerna-temp
tags and add the tags tolatest
.
A temporary dist-tag is used at the start to prevent the case where only some of the packages are published; this can cause issues for users installing a package that only has some updated packages.
$ lerna publish --npm-tag=next
When run with this flag, publish
will publish to npm with the given npm dist-tag (defaults to latest
).
This option can be used to publish a prerelease
or beta
version.
Note: the
latest
tag is the one that is used when a user runsnpm install my-package
. To install a different tag, a user can runnpm install my-package@prerelease
.
$ lerna publish --canary
When run with this flag, publish
publishes packages in a more granular way (per commit). Before publishing to npm, it creates the new version
tag by taking the current version
and appending the current git sha (ex: 1.0.0-alpha.81e3b443
).
The intended use case for this flag is a per commit level release or nightly release.
$ lerna publish --skip-git
When run with this flag, publish
will publish to npm without running any of the git commands.
Only publish to npm; skip committing, tagging, and pushing git changes (this only affects publish).
$ lerna publish --skip-npm
When run with this flag, publish
will update all package.json
package
versions and dependency versions, but it will not actually publish the
packages to npm.
This is useful as a workaround for an npm
issue which prevents README updates
from appearing on npmjs.com when published via Lerna. When publishing with
README changes, use --skip-npm
and do the final npm publish
by hand for
each package.
This flag can be combined with --skip-git
to just update versions and
dependencies, without comitting, tagging, pushing or publishing.
Only update versions and dependencies; don't actually publish (this only affects publish).
$ lerna publish --force-publish=package-2,package-4
# force publish all packages
$ lerna publish --force-publish=*
When run with this flag, publish
will force publish the specified packages (comma-separated) or all packages using *
.
This will skip the
lerna updated
check for changed packages and forces a package that didn't have agit diff
change to be updated.
$ lerna publish --canary --yes
# skips `Are you sure you want to publish the above changes?`
When run with this flag, publish
will skip all confirmation prompts.
Useful in Continuous integration (CI) to automatically answer the publish confirmation prompt.
$ lerna publish --repo-version 1.0.1
# applies version and skips `Select a new version for...` prompt
When run with this flag, publish
will skip the version selection prompt and use the specified version.
Useful for bypassing the user input prompt if you already know which version to publish.
$ lerna updated
Check which packages
have changed since the last release (the last git tag).
Lerna determines the last git tag created and runs git diff --name-only v6.8.1
to get all files changed since that tag. It then returns an array of packages that have an updated file.
$ lerna clean
Remove the node_modules
directory from all packages.
$ lerna diff [package?]
$ lerna diff
# diff a specific package
$ lerna diff package-name
Diff all packages or a single package since the last release.
Similar to
lerna updated
. This command runsgit diff
.
$ lerna ls
List all of the public packages in the current Lerna repo.
$ lerna run [script] # runs npm run my-script in all packages that have it
$ lerna run test
$ lerna run build
Run an npm script in each package that contains that script.
lerna run
respects the --concurrency
flag (see below).
lerna run
respects the --scope
flag (see below).
$ lerna run --scope my-component test
$ lerna exec -- [command] # runs the command in all packages
$ lerna exec -- rm -rf ./node_modules
$ lerna exec -- protractor conf.js
Run an arbitrary command in each package.
lerna exec
respects the --concurrency
flag (see below).
lerna exec
respects the --scope
flag (see below).
$ lerna exec --scope my-component -- ls -la
Hint: The commands are spawned in parallel, using the concurrency given. The output is piped through, so not deterministic. If you want to run the command in one package after another, use it like this:
$ lerna exec --concurrency 1 -- ls -la
$ lerna import <path-to-external-repository>
Import the package at <path-to-external-repository>
, with commit history,
into packages/<directory-name>
. Original commit authors, dates and messages
are preserved. Commits are applied to the current branch.
This is useful for gathering pre-existing standalone packages into a Lerna
repo. Each commit is modified to make changes relative to the package
directory. So, for example, the commit that added package.json
will
instead add packages/<directory-name>/package.json
.
Lerna will log to a lerna-debug.log
file (same as npm-debug.log
) when it encounters an error running a command.
Lerna also has support for scoped packages.
Running lerna
without arguments will show all commands/options.
{
"lerna": "2.0.0-beta.18",
"version": "1.1.3",
"publishConfig": {
"ignore": [
"ignored-file",
"*.md"
]
},
"linkedFiles": {
"prefix": "/**\n * @flow\n */"
}
}
lerna
: the current version of Lerna being used.version
: the current version of the repository.publishConfig.ignore
: an array of globs that won't be included inlerna updated/publish
. Use this to prevent publishing a new version unnecessarily for changes, such as fixing aREADME.md
typo.linkedFiles.prefix
: a prefix added to linked dependency files.
Most devDependencies
can be pulled up to the root of a Lerna repo.
This has a few benefits:
- All packages use the same version of a given dependency
- Can keep dependencies at the root up-to-date with an automated tool such as GreenKeeper
- Dependency installation time is reduced
- Less storage is needed
Note that devDependencies
providing "binary" executables that are used by
npm scripts still need to be installed directly in each package where they're
used.
For example the nsp
dependency is necessary in this case for lerna run nsp
(and npm run nsp
within the package's directory) to work correctly:
{
"scripts": {
"nsp": "nsp"
},
"devDependencies": {
"nsp": "^2.3.3"
}
}
How many threads to use when Lerna parallelizes the tasks (defaults to 4
)
$ lerna publish --concurrency 1
Scopes a command to a subset of packages.
$ lerna exec --scope my-component -- ls -la
$ lerna run --scope toolbar-* test
Excludes a subset of packages when running a command.
$ lerna bootstrap --ignore component-*
The ignore
flag, when used with the bootstrap
command, can also be set in lerna.json
under the bootstrapConfig
key. The command-line flag will take precendence over this option.
Example
{
"lerna": "2.0.0-beta.16",
"version": "0.0.0",
"bootstrapConfig": {
"ignore": "component-*"
}
}
Hint: The glob is matched against the package name defined in
package.json
, not the directory name the package lives in.
Only will bump versions for packages that have been updated explicitly rather than cross-dependencies.
This may not make sense for a major version bump since other packages that depend on the updated packages wouldn't be updated.
$ lerna updated --only-explicit-updates
$ lerna publish --only-explicit-updates
Ex: in Babel, babel-types
is depended upon by all packages in the monorepo (over 100). However, Babel uses ^
for most of it's dependencies so it isn't necessary to bump the versions of all packages if only babel-types
is updated. This option allows only the packages that have been explicitly updated to make a new version.