klepto

0.10.1 • Public • Published

Klepto

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The composite package management tool

What does Klepto do?

Klepto is a package manager for self-hosted archive sets. Klepto provides the standard set of package management tools, but is designed to work alongside, or replace, existing package tools like Bower or Component.

The main audience for Klepto is a development group that wants to setup their own internal package repository. Klepto also supports transitioning away from other component systems; with custom sources Klepto will use a different transport protocol for each source matched, so a single vault.json can pull from local folders, bower, and http paths each with dependencies which pull from different transport protocols.

Klepto supports archives distributed through the web, github repositories, ftp, or local folders. It supports archives being pulled from multiple sources and also searching across multiple sources.

Archive is used to refer to any package Klepto can install or publish and should be taken as a synonym for module, package, or component.

How does Klepto work?

When Klepto installs archives it:

  1. Resolves the reference against configurable scoping rules (eg @internal/sub-folder/repo)
  2. Pulls and caches an archive file/folder from an external source
  3. Reviews the archive manifest (eg. bower.json, component.json, or vault.json) rules to install all dependent archives
  4. All archives are placed in project archive folders, defined by the source or match rule

Klepto does not pass through any commands to existing package managers. It is a stand-alone package manager which allows a development team to distribute packages as they choose.

Installation

Klepto requires Node v6

Install globally via npm.

npm install --global klepto;

Install globally via yarn.

yarn global add klepto;

Usage

After Klepto is installed globally invoke klepto to see the commands available.

klepto

Klepto is only useful in a project folder where we want to include additional remote code libraries (ie. archives). When you invoke Klepto it will look for repository configuration files or accept rules on the command line.

The following will outline the usage and purpose of each command.

Help

# write help information for the `klepto configure` command 
klepto help configure

The help command will provide a terse summary of a command with a documentation on every switch the command takes.

Version

# shows the current version 
klepto version;
klepto -v;

Tracking and exposing the version of an application is standard practice.

Initialize

# setup a default configuration 
klepto initialze

Will initialize a project folder with two files, if they do not exist:

  1. A Klepto configuration (.vaultrc) which can be managed via klepto configure
  2. An archive manifest (vault.json) which identifies this archive and lists dependencies on other archives

Install

Install is the core tool of Klepto, it installs a series of archives and all of their dependencies. Install has two modes:

  1. Install a single repository, and all dependencies
  2. Install all the dependencies of the archive (ie. read the archive configuration, bower.json, vault.json) of the current folder

Regardless of which mode is chosen the result is the same, the vault/ folder will have new components. The Install command has a few forms.

# install all archives in a <component-manifest>.json file 
klepto install
# install a single archive, with dependencies, from a direct reference 
klepto install http://direct/referece.tar.gz
# install a single archive, with dependencies, from a pre-defined scope 
klepto install acme-archive/big-red-button@2.0.0

Klepto can install from:

  • Git
  • HTTP(s)
  • (s)FTP
  • Local Folder

Klepto can install archives packaged as:

  • Folder, as in a local folder or git repository
  • .zip
  • .tar(.gz)

When you invoke Install, the uri provided will indicate which transit and package protocol to use. There is no way to force Klepto to identify the resource differently.

Source URI

Usually you will have multiple archives stored in a central repository and want many people to call down archives consistently. To support this, we have Sources. A Source defines a mapping procedure between the source uri and the actuall uri you need.

We can install an archive in one of two ways:

# uses the source "big-blue" 
klepto install big-blue/button@1.2.3
# source translates to this, which we could use directly 
klepto install https://dev.big-blue.co/archives/components/button_1.2.3.zip

Klepto will use the version number associated with the install if the archive does not have a manifest that defines one.

To define a source we edit a .vaultrc file in the project or at a parent folder. It is useful to include sources in parent folders because Klepto will merge all configuration files together, so the global sources you define will be merged in to the configuration used in a project.

{
  "sources": {
    "big-blue": {
      "pattern": "source/component",
      "pull": {
        "uri": "http://dev.big-blue.co/archives/components/${component}_${version}.zip"
      }
    }
  }
}

In the example above, we defined a pattern to split variables off of the source uri (big-blue/button) and then defined uri for pull to download the component and expand the uri.

Support Matrix

Zip Tar Folder
Git Pull
HTTP Pull Pull
FTP Push Push Push
Local Pull, Push Pull, Push Pull, Push

Supported Transit/Package Combinations

Git / Folder

A git folder is treated as the entire archive. This is similar to how Bower or Component work and allow Klepto to support exist repositories as archives.

Local / Folder & File

A local path, whether file or folder, will always expand to an archive.

Uninstall

# the command will fail, this component was never installed 
klepto uninstall does-not-exist

Uninstall will remove installed archives. This is a simple tool that erases folders. It will either erase the entire folder if you use —all or an archive, if named.

If the archive is not found, then command will fail.

Publish

While all commands will work without configuration, the Publish command works best if configured through a .vaultrc file. To publish to FTP I would need a .vaultrc with these properties:

{
  "sources": {
    "myftp": {
      "pattern": "source/component",
      "push": {
        "uri": "ftp://you@127.0.0.1:22/components/${component}",
        "subfolder": "release/folder/"
      },
      "authentication": {
        "key": "abcdefghijk"
      }
    }
  }
}

You need three things to publish:

  1. A uri to publish to
  2. A subfolder usually where your release exists in the project
  3. Authentication information, which usually is stored elsewhere, but can be included in Klepto

To use this configuration with Publish you would:

# publish the release folder as a folder 
klepto publish myftp/?
# publish the release folder as a zip file 
klepto publish myftp/?.zip

The ? is a special character in the Publish command, it is a substitute for component__version and does not have to be used.

Storing Authentication Keys

The Publish command with FTP requires you add your password as an authentication property. To add this to your .vaultrc use Configure.

klepto configure --encrypt myftp.authentication.key myPassword

Configure

# change the folder to store cached archives 
klepto configure paths.cache ./cache

The configure command allows you to configure and inspect the settings which influence how Klepto will deliver/publish archives. The configuration which influences Klepto is calculated:

  1. The internal default configuration from Klepto
  2. The global configuration (at ~/.valultrc)
  3. Every parent folder of the project folder, which is readable
  4. The project folder itself

Each version over-writes deep keys (does not clobber top-level keys) the previous wrote. When you type kelpto configure you will see the entire configuration which affects Klepto.

Write/Read

The configuration command accepts a reference and a value.

  • If a value is provided, then the command will write a value to your local .vaultrc file (see —global).
  • If a value is not provided, then the command will read and show the key in the reference
klepto configure paths
# see all paths for storing folders 
klepto configure paths.release .release
# change the release folder to ./.release 

You can change all of these settings by editting the configuration in a text editor. See or create a .vaultrc file in your project, that file will override all settings.

Sharing Configurations

A useful application of this feature is to share configurations, for instance (see Install) if you want to give access to a set of install sources (different paths to install/publisu) to an entire team, then you could share a single configuration at a root level of a users folder or project folder.

If your folder structure were:

- Home
    - Development
    - .vaultrc
        - Project1
        - Project2

The .vaultrc file might have a source defined. If Klepto is invoked in Project 1 or Project 2 it will know the source and install from that remote repository.

The .vaultrc might have this in it.

{
  "sources": {
    "internal-archive": {
      "pattern": "source/component",
      "pull": {
        "uri": "http://internal.co/components/${component}/${component}--${version}.zip"
      }
    }
  }
}

This configuration would allow us to install to or publish to internal-archive as a source.

# will hit the server http://internal.co/ 
klepto install internal-archive/my-library@1.2.3

Clean

# erase temporary folders 
klepto clean

There are two temporary folders which Klepto uses to store archives:

  1. cache, for the raw version of an archive
  2. staging, a normalized cache, where archives store the same way, unlike cache which can have different file types and folders based on the archive system

Not all archives that Klepto supports express in the same way; some are files, some folders. Klepto needs a cache and staging folder to normalize an archive before deploying to an application folder.

Download

# download to cache/staging the button archive 
klepto download @external/button@1.0.0

Download is more of a helper command. It will fill the cache with archives based on the same rules as klepto install. All of the rules that apply to the Install command, apply to Download. The only difference is that Download will not take the last step of placing the resolved archive in the final vault file.

Exit

# does nothing 
klepto exit

Under the hood Klepto uses Vorpal which adds an exit command to the command list. Vorpal supports an interactive CLI session where an application will accept all commands from it's own prompt. Therefore it is important to offer an exit command to leave that session.

Klepto disables this feature, but the exit command is added by Vorpal.

Configuration

Archive Configuration

Klepto is built to read multiple archive component manifests. Klepto has only one purpose, to install the correct version of an archive. Klepto only reviews the following keys, which happen to be consistent across a number of component/archive tools.

{
    "name": "--",
    "version": "--",
    "dependencies": {
  
    },
    "devDependencies": {
  
    },
    "resolutions": {
    
    },
    "ignore": [
        "**/.*",
        "node_modules",
        "bower_components",
        "test",
        "tests"
    ]
}

Klepto uses each property in the following ways:

Property Purpose
name The name of the component when installed.
version The version of this archive
dependencies The versions of archives required when being install and installing
devDependencies The versions of archives required when installing this component
resolutions the absolute version to install for an archive
ignore Files/folders to ignore when installing an archive

Klepto Application Configuration

The following explains the full configuration for Klepto. Configurations for Klepto are stored in a .vaultrc file. The order .vaultrc files are read and merged to create a final configuration to use when invoking Klepto follows this order:

  1. The internal default configuration from Klepto
  2. The global configuration (at ~/.valultrc)
  3. Every parent folder of the project folder, which is readable
  4. The project folder itself

Each version over-writes deep keys (does not clobber top-level keys) from the previous version.

There are three sections to the configuration

Section Purpose
sources A set of external sources for where to install or publish to
paths Folder paths for where to read/write files
rules Information about different component systems, files to ignore, and rules special symbols for semantic versioning

License

MIT. Copyright (c) 2018 Michael Jaworski. Klepto is an OPEN Open Source Project.

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npm i klepto

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