Nodules is an asynchronous module loader for Node that provides URL/HTTP-based module ids, module hot-reloading, and package based module mapping. Nodules implements the CommonJS package.json mappings proposal and automatically analyzes modules references and downloads any dependencies on first access prior to executing modules. Remotely downloaded modules are retained so they only need to be downloaded once. Nodules supports standard CommonJS modules, and CommonJS module transport format via require, require.ensure, define, and require.define.
To see Nodules in action right away, go into the "example" directory, and you can start the example "package" with:
node ../lib/nodules.js
The first time you run this, Nodules should automatically download the dependency, and then start the application. You can test the module hot-reloading by making a change to sibling.js while it is running.
The most direct way to load a module with nodules is simply to load the module from the command prompt:
node /path/to/nodules.js http://somesite.com/my-module.js
The require provided by nodules is transitive, so all dependencies of my-module will also be able to utilize full URLs. Nodules asynchronously downloads all the deep dependencies of a module prior to execution so that all requires can execute synchronously even though all modules are fetched asynchronously. The modules are all saved/cached locally so that future require calls (in future program executions) can always run locally.
Naturally, it is easier to start nodules with a script, create a script with using the script from example/nodules as a template, and you can simply do:
nodules module-to-load
For any type of real development, it is recommended that you use packages rather than unorganized individual modules. Nodules provides an elegant mechanism for working with packages based on package.json mappings. A package is a directory/file structure for a set of modules, module configuration, and other resources. An example can be found in the nodules's "example" directory. If you run nodules from within a package, it will automatically read the "package.json" from the current working directory for module configuration and id mapping, use the "lib" as one of the default paths for looking modules, and execute the "lib/index.js" file if it exists. The package.json's mappings can contain mappings to URIs so that you don't have to use URIs directly in your require calls in your modules. For example, your package.json could define this mapping to map the foo namespace to the modules from a package archive available from somesite.com:
package.json
{
"name":"my-project",
"mappings": {
"foo": "http://somesite.com/foo.zip"
}
}
We could then define our index.js file using that mapping:
lib/index.js:
var Something = require("foo/bar").Something; // The module from http://somesite.com/foo/lib/bar.js
Something();
Now we can run our package by simply starting nodules from inside this directory (with package.json):
nodules
Nodules supports referening package zip file which is the recommended mechanism for referencing packages: For example:
"mappings": {
"commonjs-utils": "http://github.com/kriszyp/commonjs-utils/zipball/master"
}
When the target ends with a slash, the mapping will only match module ids in require statements where the mapping is the first term in a path, so this would match something of the form:
require(""commonjs-utils/lazy-array");
You can also map directly to individual modules by specifying the full URL with an extension (and Nodules support the jar: scheme). For example:
"lazy-array": "jar:http://github.com/kriszyp/commonjs-utils/zipball/master!/lib/lazy-array.js"
This will only match the exact module id of require("lazy-array") (not require("lazy-array/...")).
Another critical aspect of productive development is module reloading so you don't have to constantly restart your VM. To use reloading, you can wrap your reloadable code in a require.reloadable function. This function takes a callback that is called whenever any loaded modules change (including when it is first called). For example:
require.reloadable(function(){
// Load the app and assign to "app" when started and for each reload
app = require("./my-app.js");
});
// Don't re-execute http server initiation for each reload, should only load once
http.createServer(function(request, response){
app(request, response);
}).listen(80);
Nodules does intelligent dependency tracking so that when a file changes, the appropriate modules are reloaded. All the modules that depend on the modified module are reloaded to ensure correct references, but modules without depedency on the modified module are not reloaded. This enabled optimal reloading performance while ensuring the proper references to objects are flushed for consistent behavior.
Nodules also supports modules that return a value or switch the exports. This very useful for situations where it is desirable for a module to provide a single function or constructor. One can create a module that returns a function like this: return function(){ ... };
Or exports = function(){ ... };
You can still use nodules programmatically without having to start Node with nodules as the starting script. You can use Nodules's ensure function to asynchronously load an Nodules's entry module:
require("nodules").ensure("http://somesite.com/foo", function(require){
require("./foo");
});
Where foo.js could have:
var someModule = require("http://othersite.com/path/to/module");
For "normal" top-level ids, require will default to the system's require implementation, so modules can still do:
var fs = require("fs");
Nodules downloads any necessary dependencies and stores them locally. By default these files will be downloaded to a directory structure rooted in the current working directory (under "downloaded-modules"). However, the location of the local directory of downloaded packages/modules can be defined with the NODULES_PATH environment variable. It is generally recommended that you define the NODULES_PATH variable (to an absolute path) so that the same set of cached/downloaded packages/modules can be reused from different working directories.
It is perfectly valid and reasonable to edit files from the locally downloaded file set within this path. By default URLs are mapped to the file system by converting each part of the URL to a path, but this makes heavily nested paths. To make it easier to edit and work with your own packages, you can define a paths.json file in the NODULES_PATH directory that defines how URLs are mapped to the local file system. For example, this makes a good paths.json for directing your git projects to your own projects directory:
{
"(jar:)?http://github.com/my-name/([^\/]+)/zipball/[^\/]+!?" : "/projects/$2"
}
(URLs that don't match will be saved using the default mapping mechanism.)
CommonJS packages provides a means for creating engine-specific overlays to define alternate configurations for other engines. For example, one could define an overlay in package.json: { "overlay":{ "node": { "file": "fs" } } }
We can also define a compiler to be used on sources prior to execution. This is more efficient than using a global extension matching like registerExtension since it only applies to the package that defines the compiler rather than being global. In your package.json you can define a compiler to use (this is how you would use CoffeeScript):
{
"compiler": {
"module": "jar:http://github.com/jashkenas/coffee-script/zipball/master!/lib/coffee-script.js",
"function": "compile"
},
"extension": ".coffee",
...
}
The "module" property is required, and the "function" property is optional and defaults to "compile".
If your machine is behind a proxy, Nodules will need to go through the proxy for HTTP downloads. Nodules will read the "http_proxy" environmental variable to determine what proxy it needs to route requests through.
Nodules provides several top level modules for modules loaded with Nodules, including "promise" (promise library), "system" (based on CommonJS module), "fs-promise" (promise based fs module), and "nodules" (the nodules module itself).
You can download and run the Persevere example wiki application with Nodules to see a more complex use of dependencies.
Copyright (c) 2010, The Dojo Foundation All Rights Reserved. Nodules is a sub-project of Persevere (www.persvr.org) and is thus available under either the terms of the modified BSD license or the Academic Free License version 2.1. As a recipient of nodules, you may choose which license to receive this code under.
Currently alpha level, issues: URI redirection needs to properly change module ids More unit tests