A boilerplate for creating AdonisJS packages
This repo provides you with a starting point for creating AdonisJS packages. Of course, you can create a package from scratch with your folder structure and workflow. However, using this starter kit can speed up the process, as you have fewer decisions to make.
- Clone the repo on your computer, or use
giget
to download this repo without the Git history.npx giget@latest gh:adonisjs/pkg-starter-kit
- Install dependencies.
- Update the
package.json
file and define thename
,description
,keywords
, andauthor
properties. - The repo is configured with an MIT license. Feel free to change that if you are not publishing under the MIT license.
The starter kit mimics the folder structure of the official packages. Feel free to rename files and folders as per your requirements.
├── providers
├── src
├── bin
├── stubs
├── configure.ts
├── index.ts
├── LICENSE.md
├── package.json
├── README.md
├── tsconfig.json
├── tsnode.esm.js
- The
configure.ts
file exports theconfigure
hook to configure the package using thenode ace configure
command. - The
index.ts
file is the main entry point of the package. - The
tsnode.esm.js
file runs TypeScript code using TS-Node + SWC. Please read the code comment in this file to learn more. - The
bin
directory contains the entry point file to run Japa tests. - Learn more about the
providers
directory. - Learn more about the
src
directory. - Learn more about the
stubs
directory.
We use snake_case
naming conventions for the file system. The rule is enforced using ESLint. However, turn off the rule and use your preferred naming conventions.
The starter kit has a peer dependency on @adonisjs/core@6
. Since you are creating a package for AdonisJS, you must make it against a specific version of the framework core.
If your package needs Lucid to be functional, you may install @adonisjs/lucid
as a development dependency and add it to the list of peerDependencies
.
As a rule of thumb, packages installed in the user application should be part of the peerDependencies
of your package and not the main dependency.
For example, if you install @adonisjs/core
as a main dependency, then essentially, you are importing a separate copy of @adonisjs/core
and not sharing the one from the user application. Here is a great article explaining peer dependencies.
Instead of publishing your repo's source code to npm, you must cherry-pick files and folders to publish only the required files.
The cherry-picking uses the files
property inside the package.json
file. By default, we publish the following files and folders.
{
"files": ["build/src", "build/providers", "build/stubs", "build/index.d.ts", "build/index.js"]
}
If you create additional folders or files, mention them inside the files
array.
Node.js Subpath exports allows you to define the exports of your package regardless of the folder structure. This starter kit defines the following exports.
{
"exports": {
".": "./build/index.js",
"./types": "./build/src/types.js"
}
}
- The dot
.
export is the main export. - The
./types
exports all the types defined inside the./build/src/types.js
file (the compiled output).
Feel free to change the exports as per your requirements.
We configure the Japa test runner with this starter kit. Japa is used in AdonisJS applications as well. Just run one of the following commands to execute tests.
npm run test
: This command will first lint the code using ESlint and then run tests and report the test coverage using c8.npm run quick:test
: Runs only the tests without linting or coverage reporting.
The starter kit also has a Github workflow file to run tests using Github Actions. The tests are executed against Node.js 20.x
and Node.js 21.x
versions on both Linux and Windows. Feel free to edit the workflow file in the .github/workflows
directory.
- The starter kit uses tsc for compiling the TypeScript to JavaScript when publishing the package.
- TS-Node and SWC are used to run tests without compiling the source code.
- The
tsconfig.json
file is extended from@adonisjs/tsconfig
and uses theNodeNext
module system. Meaning the packages are written using ES modules. - You can perform type checking without compiling the source code using the
npm run type check
script.
Feel free to explore the tsconfig.json
file for all the configured options.
The starter kit configures ESLint and Prettier. Both configurations are stored within the package.json
file and use our shared config. Feel free to change the configuration, use custom plugins, or remove both tools altogether.
The Stale bot is a Github application that automatically marks issues and PRs as stale and closes after a specific duration of inactivity.
Feel free to delete the .github/stale.yml
and .github/lock.yml
files if you decide not to use the Stale bot.