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feat: download the latest version instead of a pinned one #134
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Original file line number | Diff line number | Diff line change |
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@@ -12,6 +12,23 @@ import * as httpUtils from './httpUtils | |
import * as nodeUtils from './nodeUtils'; | ||
import {RegistrySpec, Descriptor, Locator, PackageManagerSpec} from './types'; | ||
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export async function fetchLatestStableVersion(spec: RegistrySpec) { | ||
switch (spec.type) { | ||
case `npm`: { | ||
const {[`dist-tags`]: {latest}, versions: {[latest]: {dist: {shasum}}}} = | ||
There was a problem hiding this comment. Choose a reason for hiding this commentThe reason will be displayed to describe this comment to others. Learn more. Should this consider the major version? What about when npm 7 bumped to npm 8 to drop support for node 12. Imagine if corepack existed then and suddenly npm stopped working because of the automatic fetch latest. There was a problem hiding this comment. Choose a reason for hiding this commentThe reason will be displayed to describe this comment to others. Learn more. That’s worth discussing, but imo it’s ok to ignore that for the initial implementation. |
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await httpUtils.fetchAsJson(`https://registry.npmjs.org/${spec.package}`); | ||
return `${latest}+sha1.${shasum}`; | ||
} | ||
case `url`: { | ||
const data = await httpUtils.fetchAsJson(spec.url); | ||
return data[spec.fields.tags].stable; | ||
} | ||
default: { | ||
throw new Error(`Unsupported specification ${JSON.stringify(spec)}`); | ||
} | ||
} | ||
} | ||
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export async function fetchAvailableTags(spec: RegistrySpec): Promise<Record<string, string>> { | ||
switch (spec.type) { | ||
case `npm`: { | ||
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In what case would there be no Known Good Release?
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Upon the first time Corepack is run with a given package manager. The idea behind this PR would be not to rely on what version is set on
config.json
but instead get the most up-to-date version from npm registry.There was a problem hiding this comment.
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How often does it check the registry? Does it check every time you invoke yarn/pnpm/npm because that seems slow. Especially if I just want to do
npm run <script>
which should work offline.There was a problem hiding this comment.
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No, only the first time, at which point it saves it as Known Good Release. Users can then update (or downgrade) that version by using
corepack prepare
orcorepack hydrate
(e.g.corepack prepare pnpm@latest --activate
to get the latest pnpm by default). We could make an automated process for the Known Good Version to expire after some time, but that's not part of this initial implementation.There was a problem hiding this comment.
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Thanks, I understand now 👍
I think expiring would could be confusing. I also think this any auto update could be confusing because it no longer ties the package manager version to the corepack version (or node version for that matter).
I think it’s best to let the user decide when to upgrade and perhaps provide better docs how to upgrade (this isn’t super clear today). Without corepack, this is handled with a notification that says something like npm i -g npm@latest.
Has any of this behavior been reviewed by the npm team? I think they had some ideas about Know Good Release.
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Well that's the reason Corepack exists, because the Node.js TSC doesn't want to have specific version of a package manager tied in with a specific Node.js version – specifically, several Node.js TSC members have expressed that the reason they are supportive of Corepack is to get rid of having to do security releases every time a vulnerability is reported in npm rather than
node
itself.So the auto-lookup during the first use has to be the default behavior.
Yes that makes sense, letting the end-user in control is very much the goal here. So instead of
npm i -g npm@latest
, users would typecorepack prepare npm@latest --activate
, which is arguably quite similar. Improving docs is of course always a goal.The npm team hasn't shown much interest in the development of Corepack, so I don't think they have.