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Contributing
Very useful to confirm your changes will release to NPM ok. This is necessary if your PR adds or removes dependencies. It's common for a package to work ok in a local monorepo, but then be missing a dependency if it's installed standalone.
Thank you to @ThomasG77 for the original instructions
In one console
In a new directory initialise and start a local registry using verdaccio. This is similar to publishing the package to NPM, except it only occurs on your local machine.
npx verdaccio
Do not kill the console as you need to leave the verdaccio server running.
If you ever want to clear your verdaccio state on a Unix-y machine:
rm -r ~/.local/share/verdaccio/storage/*
In a second console
Create verdaccio user You only need to do this when you're setting up verdaccio afresh
Create a new user in the empty verdaccio registry, and log in. Enter your username, password and email. The user and password can be made up - you're only using them on your local machine.
Note for this to work I had to use node v18+. Node 16 would bomb out with ECONNREFUSED message.
npm adduser --registry http://localhost:4873
npm login --registry http://localhost:4873
Get your working copy ready
git clone https://github.com/Turfjs/turf.git
<-- or whatever branch you're testing
cd turf
Create a local branch and switch to it. Call the branch something meaningful to your test e.g. v7.0.0-pr1234
git checkout -b v7.0.0-pr1234
Instruct lerna to update all the packages in the monorepo for a new release.
pnpm lerna version --no-push --no-commit-hooks v7.0.0-pr1234
Change the registry url in lerna.json from https://registry.npmjs.org
to http://localhost:4873
. Commit this change to your local branch, otherwise lerna will grumble that you have uncommitted changes.
git add -u
git commit -m "Update registry for lerna local tests"
Publish to your local registry
Publish to the local registry running in the other console.
pnpm lerna publish --ignore-scripts from-package
In a third console
Create a simple test app to import the module you're testing, and install the new version from your local registry. For the example below, we're testing a change to turf-clusters-dbscan. Replace with whichever module you're testing.
pnpm add @turf/clusters-dbscan --registry http://localhost:4873
Confirm installed version is v7.0.0-pr1234
head node_modules/@turf/clusters-dbscan/package.json
If your simple test app can be run with no "Cannot find module" errors, that's a good sign the standalone package installs all the dependencies it needs.