Gathering detailed insights and metrics for @dual-bundle/import-meta-resolve
Gathering detailed insights and metrics for @dual-bundle/import-meta-resolve
Gathering detailed insights and metrics for @dual-bundle/import-meta-resolve
Gathering detailed insights and metrics for @dual-bundle/import-meta-resolve
import-meta-resolve
Resolve things like Node.js — ponyfill for `import.meta.resolve`
resolve-pathname
Resolve URL pathnames using JavaScript
mlly
Missing ECMAScript module utils for Node.js
resolve-cwd
Resolve the path of a module like `require.resolve()` but from the current working directory
A fork of `import-meta-resolve` with commonjs + ESM support at the same time, AKA dual package.
npm install @dual-bundle/import-meta-resolve
Module System
Min. Node Version
Typescript Support
Node Version
NPM Version
1 Stars
83 Commits
2 Branches
1 Contributors
Updated on 09 May 2024
JavaScript (100%)
Cumulative downloads
Total Downloads
Last day
-5.1%
271,237
Compared to previous day
Last week
1.7%
1,507,626
Compared to previous week
Last month
8.6%
6,391,205
Compared to previous month
Last year
0%
35,613,050
Compared to previous year
@dual-bundle/import-meta-resolve
A fork of import-meta-resolve
with commonjs + ESM support at the same time, AKA dual package.
It will rebase and try to release in order to sync with the upstream every day, see .github/workflows/rebase.yml for details.
1# npm 2npm install @dual-bundle/import-meta-resolve 3 4# yarn 5yarn add @dual-bundle/import-meta-resolve
Resolve things like Node.js.
This package is a ponyfill for import.meta.resolve
.
It supports everything you need to resolve files just like modern Node does:
import maps, export maps, loading CJS and ESM projects, all of that!
As of Node.js 20.0, import.meta.resolve
is still behind an experimental flag.
This package can be used to do what it does in Node 16–20.
This package is ESM only. In Node.js (version 16+), install with npm:
1npm install import-meta-resolve
1import {resolve} from 'import-meta-resolve' 2 3// A file: 4console.log(resolve('./index.js', import.meta.url)) 5//=> file:///Users/tilde/Projects/oss/import-meta-resolve/index.js 6 7// A CJS package: 8console.log(resolve('builtins', import.meta.url)) 9//=> file:///Users/tilde/Projects/oss/import-meta-resolve/node_modules/builtins/index.js 10 11// A scoped CJS package: 12console.log(resolve('@eslint/eslintrc', import.meta.url)) 13//=> file:///Users/tilde/Projects/oss/import-meta-resolve/node_modules/@eslint/eslintrc/lib/index.js 14 15// A package with an export map: 16console.log(resolve('micromark/lib/parse', import.meta.url)) 17//=> file:///Users/tilde/Projects/oss/import-meta-resolve/node_modules/micromark/lib/parse.js 18 19// A node builtin: 20console.log(resolve('fs', import.meta.url)) 21//=> node:fs
This package exports the identifiers moduleResolve
and
resolve
.
There is no default export.
resolve(specifier, parent)
Match import.meta.resolve
except that parent
is required (you can pass
import.meta.url
).
specifier
(string
)
— the module specifier to resolve relative to parent
(/example.js
, ./example.js
, ../example.js
, some-package
, fs
, etc)parent
(string
, example: import.meta.url
)
— the absolute parent module URL to resolve from; you must pass
import.meta.url
or something elseFull file:
, data:
, or node:
URL (string
) to the found thing
Throws an ErrnoException
.
moduleResolve(specifier, parent, conditions, preserveSymlinks)
The “Resolver Algorithm Specification” as detailed in the Node docs
(which is slightly lower-level than resolve
).
specifier
(string
)
— /example.js
, ./example.js
, ../example.js
, some-package
, fs
, etcparent
(URL
, example: import.meta.url
)
— full URL (to a file) that specifier
is resolved relative fromconditions
(Set<string>
, default: new Set(['node', 'import'])
)
— conditionspreserveSymlinks
(boolean
, default: false
)
— keep symlinks instead of resolving themA URL object (URL
) to the found thing.
Throws an ErrnoException
.
ErrnoException
One of many different errors that occur when resolving (TypeScript type).
1type ErrnoExceptionFields = Error & { 2 errnode?: number | undefined 3 code?: string | undefined 4 path?: string | undefined 5 syscall?: string | undefined 6 url?: string | undefined 7}
The code
field on errors is one of the following strings:
'ERR_INVALID_MODULE_SPECIFIER'
— when specifier
is invalid (example: '#'
)'ERR_INVALID_PACKAGE_CONFIG'
— when a package.json
is invalid (example: invalid JSON)'ERR_INVALID_PACKAGE_TARGET'
— when a package.json
exports
or imports
is invalid (example: when it
does not start with './'
)'ERR_MODULE_NOT_FOUND'
— when specifier
cannot be found in parent
(example: 'some-missing-package'
)'ERR_NETWORK_IMPORT_DISALLOWED'
— thrown when trying to resolve a local file or builtin from a remote file
(node:fs
relative to 'https://example.com'
)'ERR_PACKAGE_IMPORT_NOT_DEFINED'
— when a local import is not defined in an import map (example: '#local'
when not defined)'ERR_PACKAGE_PATH_NOT_EXPORTED'
— when an export is not defined in an export map (example: 'tape/index.js'
,
which is not in its export map)'ERR_UNSUPPORTED_DIR_IMPORT'
— when attempting to import a directory (example: './lib/'
)'ERR_UNKNOWN_FILE_EXTENSION'
— when somehow reading a file that has an unexpected extensions ('./readme.md'
)'ERR_INVALID_ARG_VALUE'
— when conditions
is incorrectThe algorithm for resolve
matches how Node handles import.meta.resolve
, with
a couple of differences.
The algorithm for moduleResolve
matches the Resolver Algorithm
Specification as detailed in the Node docs (which is sync and slightly
lower-level than resolve
).
parent
defaulting to import.meta.url
cannot be ponyfilled: you have to
explicitly pass it--conditions
,
--experimental-default-type
,
--experimental-json-modules
,
--experimental-network-imports
,
--experimental-policy
,
--experimental-wasm-modules
,
--input-type
,
--no-addons
,
--preserve-symlinks
, nor
--preserve-symlinks-main
workWATCH_REPORT_DEPENDENCIES
env variableString#slice
or so from being tampered with, whereas this doesn’tThis package is fully typed with TypeScript.
It exports the additional type ErrnoException
.
This package is at least compatible with all maintained versions of Node.js. As of now, that is Node.js 16 and later.
Yes please! See How to Contribute to Open Source.
MIT © Titus Wormer and Node.js contributors
No vulnerabilities found.
No security vulnerabilities found.