at this point this thing is ancient history, not recommended for modern use ;-)
This is currently intended to be cloned as a starter template for a new node module. It was created to serve as a utility/backup for my module template experiments and is a bit outdated now.
git clone https://github.com/mdelucchi/originator.git your-module-name
watch
- starts file watcher
lint
- runs eslint on /src
test
- runs tests and formats piped TAP output with tap-spec.
ci
- Travis CI integration + zuul multi-framework & browser tests
cover
- generates code coverage text-summary report in terminal
report
- generates code coverage html report and opens it in browser
coveralls
- runs code coverage and sends report to coveralls
zuul
- runs browser tests via zuul at http://localhost:9966/__zuul
-
babel - compiler for writing next generation JavaScript
-
babel-eslint - ESLint using Babel as the parser
-
babel-istanbul - excellent coverage tool
-
babelify - Browserify transform for Babel. Used in multi-framework testing with zuul.
-
blue-tape - substack's tape test runner with promise support
-
coveralls - test coverage and history statistics support for node.js
-
eslint - A fully pluggable tool for identifying and reporting on patterns in JavaScript.
-
eslint-config-xo - ESLint shareable config for XO
-
eslint-plugin-babel - an eslint rule plugin companion to babel-eslint
-
nsp - check for vulnerabilities
-
rimraf - remove stuff
-
tap-spec - formatted TAP output
-
zuul - multi-framework javascript browser testing
Sauce Connect - Used to create tunnel allowing Travis CI to utilize Sauce Labs, a browser and mobile testing platform.
If you plan to use Sauce Connect in your new module, be sure to sign up with Sauce Labs if you haven’t already (it’s free for Open Source projects), and get your access key from your account page.
Then you'll want to replace the secured access key in .travis.yml
with your own. See the Getting Started guide on Travis for more info on setting this up.
Best bet if you're a new Travis and/or Sauce Labs user is to follow their steps to create a new .travis.yml
file.
When you are ready to publish a new version of your module, the following steps can be used:
- add and commit your changes via git
npm version patch -m "Ugrade message..."
npm publish
If publish is a success, the postpublish
npm script will run git push origin master --follow-tags
, pushing up and tagging your code properly.
If you run npm version patch
before committing your changes, you'll get a message like npm ERR! Git working directory not clean.
. Commit and retry.