I do a bunch of open source and want to make it easier to maintain so many projects.
This is a CLI that abstracts away all configuration for my open source projects for linting, testing, building, and more.
This module is distributed via npm which is bundled with node and
should be installed as one of your project's devDependencies
:
npm install --save-dev kcd-scripts
This is a CLI and exposes a bin called kcd-scripts
. I don't really plan on
documenting or testing it super duper well because it's really specific to my
needs. You'll find all available scripts in src/scripts
.
This project actually dogfoods itself. If you look in the package.json
, you'll
find scripts with node src {scriptName}
. This serves as an example of some
of the things you can do with kcd-scripts
.
Unlike react-scripts
, kcd-scripts
allows you to specify your own
configuration for things and have that plug directly into the way things work
with kcd-scripts
. There are various ways that it works, but basically if you
want to have your own config for something, just add the configuration and
kcd-scripts
will use that instead of it's own internal config. In addition,
kcd-scripts
exposes its configuration so you can use it and override only
the parts of the config you need to.
This can be a very helpful way to make editor integration work for tools like ESLint which require project-based ESLint configuration to be present to work.
So, if we were to do this for ESLint, you could create an .eslintrc
with the
contents of:
{"extends": "./node_modules/kcd-scripts/eslint.js"}
Note: for now, you'll have to include an
.eslintignore
in your project until this eslint issue is resolved.
Or, for babel
, a .babelrc
with:
{"presets": ["kcd-scripts/babel"]}
Or, for jest
:
const {jest: jestConfig} = require('kcd-scripts/config')
module.exports = Object.assign(jestConfig, {
// your overrides here
// for test written in Typescript, add:
transform: {
'\\.(ts|tsx)$': '<rootDir>/node_modules/ts-jest/preprocessor.js',
},
})
Note:
kcd-scripts
intentionally does not merge things for you when you start configuring things to make it less magical and more straightforward. Extending can take place on your terms. I think this is actually a great way to do this.
This is inspired by react-scripts
.
I'm not aware of any, if you are please make a pull request and add it here! Again, this is a very specific-to-me solution.
Thanks goes to these people (emoji key):
Kent C. Dodds 💻 📖 🚇 |
Suhas Karanth 💻 🐛 |
Matt Parrish 💻 |
Mateus 💻 |
Macklin Underdown 💻 |
---|
This project follows the all-contributors specification. Contributions of any kind welcome!
MIT