mlly
Missing ECMAScript module utils for Node.js
Missing ECMAScript module utils for Node.js
While ESM Modules are evolving in Node.js ecosystem, there are still many required features that are still experimental or missing or needed to support ESM. This package tries to fill in the gap.
Usage
Install npm package:
# using yarn
yarn add mlly
# using npm
npm install mlly
Note: Node.js 14+ is recommended.
Import utils:
// ESM
import {} from "mlly";
// CommonJS
const {} = require("mlly");
Resolving ESM modules
Several utilities to make ESM resolution easier:
- Respecting ECMAScript Resolver algorithm
- Exposed from Node.js implementation
- Windows paths normalized
- Supporting custom
extensions
and/index
resolution - Supporting custom
conditions
- Support resolving from multiple paths or urls
resolve
/ resolveSync
Resolve a module by respecting ECMAScript Resolver algorithm (using wooorm/import-meta-resolve).
Additionally supports resolving without extension and /index
similar to CommonJS.
import { resolve, resolveSync } from "mlly";
// file:///home/user/project/module.mjs
console.log(await resolve("./module.mjs", { url: import.meta.url }));
Resolve options:
url
: URL or string to resolve from (default ispwd()
)conditions
: Array of conditions used for resolution algorithm (default is['node', 'import']
)extensions
: Array of additional extensions to check if import failed (default is['.mjs', '.cjs', '.js', '.json']
)
resolvePath
/ resolvePathSync
Similar to resolve
but returns a path instead of URL using fileURLToPath
.
import { resolvePath, resolveSync } from "mlly";
// /home/user/project/module.mjs
console.log(await resolvePath("./module.mjs", { url: import.meta.url }));
createResolve
Create a resolve
function with defaults.
import { createResolve } from "mlly";
const _resolve = createResolve({ url: import.meta.url });
// file:///home/user/project/module.mjs
console.log(await _resolve("./module.mjs"));
Example: Ponyfill import.meta.resolve:
import { createResolve } from "mlly";
import.meta.resolve = createResolve({ url: import.meta.url });
resolveImports
Resolve all static and dynamic imports with relative paths to full resolved path.
import { resolveImports } from "mlly";
// import foo from 'file:///home/user/project/bar.mjs'
console.log(
await resolveImports(`import foo from './bar.mjs'`, { url: import.meta.url }),
);
Syntax Analyzes
isValidNodeImport
Using various syntax detection and heuristics, this method can determine if import is a valid import or not to be imported using dynamic import()
before hitting an error!
When result is false
, we usually need a to create a CommonJS require context or add specific rules to the bundler to transform dependency.
import { isValidNodeImport } from "mlly";
// If returns true, we are safe to use `import('some-lib')`
await isValidNodeImport("some-lib", {});
Algorithm:
- Check import protocol - If is
data:
returntrue
(✅ valid) - If is notnode:
,file:
ordata:
, returnfalse
( ❌ invalid) - Resolve full path of import using Node.js Resolution algorithm
- Check full path extension
- If is
.mjs
,.cjs
,.node
or.wasm
, returntrue
(✅ valid) - If is not
.js
, returnfalse
(❌ invalid) - If is matching known mixed syntax (
.esm.js
,.es.js
, etc) returnfalse
( ❌ invalid)
- If is
- Read closest
package.json
file to resolve path - If
type: 'module'
field is set, returntrue
(✅ valid) - Read source code of resolved path
- Try to detect CommonJS syntax usage
- If yes, return
true
(✅ valid)
- If yes, return
- Try to detect ESM syntax usage
- if yes, return
false
( ❌ invalid)
- if yes, return
Notes:
- There might be still edge cases algorithm cannot cover. It is designed with best-efforts.
- This method also allows using dynamic import of CommonJS libraries considering Node.js has Interoperability with CommonJS.
hasESMSyntax
Detect if code, has usage of ESM syntax (Static import
, ESM export
and import.meta
usage)
import { hasESMSyntax } from "mlly";
hasESMSyntax("export default foo = 123"); // true
hasCJSSyntax
Detect if code, has usage of CommonJS syntax (exports
, module.exports
, require
and global
usage)
import { hasCJSSyntax } from "mlly";
hasCJSSyntax("export default foo = 123"); // false
detectSyntax
Tests code against both CJS and ESM.
isMixed
indicates if both are detected! This is a common case with legacy packages exporting semi-compatible ESM syntax meant to be used by bundlers.
import { detectSyntax } from "mlly";
// { hasESM: true, hasCJS: true, isMixed: true }
detectSyntax('export default require("lodash")');
CommonJS Context
createCommonJS
This utility creates a compatible CommonJS context that is missing in ECMAScript modules.
import { createCommonJS } from "mlly";
const { __dirname, __filename, require } = createCommonJS(import.meta.url);
Note: require
and require.resolve
implementation are lazy functions. createRequire
will be called on first usage.
Import/Export Analyzes
Tools to quickly analyze ESM syntax and extract static import
/export
- Super fast Regex based implementation
- Handle most edge cases
- Find all static ESM imports
- Find all dynamic ESM imports
- Parse static import statement
- Find all named, declared and default exports
findStaticImports
Find all static ESM imports.
Example:
import { findStaticImports } from "mlly";
console.log(
findStaticImports(`
// Empty line
import foo, { bar /* foo */ } from 'baz'
`),
);
Outputs:
[
{
type: "static",
imports: "foo, { bar /* foo */ } ",
specifier: "baz",
code: "import foo, { bar /* foo */ } from 'baz'",
start: 15,
end: 55,
},
];
parseStaticImport
Parse a dynamic ESM import statement previously matched by findStaticImports
.
Example:
import { findStaticImports, parseStaticImport } from "mlly";
const [match0] = findStaticImports(`import baz, { x, y as z } from 'baz'`);
console.log(parseStaticImport(match0));
Outputs:
{
type: 'static',
imports: 'baz, { x, y as z } ',
specifier: 'baz',
code: "import baz, { x, y as z } from 'baz'",
start: 0,
end: 36,
defaultImport: 'baz',
namespacedImport: undefined,
namedImports: { x: 'x', y: 'z' }
}
findDynamicImports
Find all dynamic ESM imports.
Example:
import { findDynamicImports } from "mlly";
console.log(
findDynamicImports(`
const foo = await import('bar')
`),
);
findExports
import { findExports } from "mlly";
console.log(
findExports(`
export const foo = 'bar'
export { bar, baz }
export default something
`),
);
Outputs:
[
{
type: "declaration",
declaration: "const",
name: "foo",
code: "export const foo",
start: 1,
end: 17,
},
{
type: "named",
exports: " bar, baz ",
code: "export { bar, baz }",
start: 26,
end: 45,
names: ["bar", "baz"],
},
{ type: "default", code: "export default ", start: 46, end: 61 },
];
findExportNames
Same as findExports
but returns array of export names.
import { findExportNames } from "mlly";
// [ "foo", "bar", "baz", "default" ]
console.log(
findExportNames(`
export const foo = 'bar'
export { bar, baz }
export default something
`),
);
resolveModuleExportNames
Resolves module and reads its contents to extract possible export names using static analyzes.
import { resolveModuleExportNames } from "mlly";
// ["basename", "dirname", ... ]
console.log(await resolveModuleExportNames("mlly"));
Evaluating Modules
Set of utilities to evaluate ESM modules using data:
imports
- Automatic import rewrite to resolved path using static analyzes
- Allow bypass ESM Cache
- Stack-trace support
.json
loader
evalModule
Transform and evaluates module code using dynamic imports.
import { evalModule } from "mlly";
await evalModule(`console.log("Hello World!")`);
await evalModule(
`
import { reverse } from './utils.mjs'
console.log(reverse('!emosewa si sj'))
`,
{ url: import.meta.url },
);
Options:
- all
resolve
options url
: File URL
loadModule
Dynamically loads a module by evaluating source code.
import { loadModule } from "mlly";
await loadModule("./hello.mjs", { url: import.meta.url });
Options are same as evalModule
.
transformModule
- Resolves all relative imports will be resolved
- All usages of
import.meta.url
will be replaced withurl
orfrom
option
import { transformModule } from "mlly";
console.log(transformModule(`console.log(import.meta.url)`), {
url: "test.mjs",
});
Options are same as evalModule
.
Other Utils
fileURLToPath
Similar to url.fileURLToPath but also converts windows backslash \
to unix slash /
and handles if input is already a path.
import { fileURLToPath } from "mlly";
// /foo/bar.js
console.log(fileURLToPath("file:///foo/bar.js"));
// C:/path
console.log(fileURLToPath("file:///C:/path/"));
pathToFileURL
Similar to url.pathToFileURL but also handles URL
input and returns a string with file://
protocol.
import { pathToFileURL } from "mlly";
// /foo/bar.js
console.log(pathToFileURL("foo/bar.js"));
// C:/path
console.log(pathToFileURL("C:\\path"));
normalizeid
Ensures id has either of node:
, data:
, http:
, https:
or file:
protocols.
import { ensureProtocol } from "mlly";
// file:///foo/bar.js
console.log(normalizeid("/foo/bar.js"));
loadURL
Read source contents of a URL. (currently only file protocol supported)
import { resolve, loadURL } from "mlly";
const url = await resolve("./index.mjs", { url: import.meta.url });
console.log(await loadURL(url));
toDataURL
Convert code to data:
URL using base64 encoding.
import { toDataURL } from "mlly";
console.log(
toDataURL(`
// This is an example
console.log('Hello world')
`),
);
interopDefault
Return the default export of a module at the top-level, alongside any other named exports.
// Assuming the shape { default: { foo: 'bar' }, baz: 'qux' }
import myModule from "my-module";
// Returns { foo: 'bar', baz: 'qux' }
console.log(interopDefault(myModule));
Options:
preferNamespace
: In case thatdefault
value exists but is not extendable (when is string for example), return input as-is (default isfalse
, meaningdefault
's value is prefered even if cannot be extended)
sanitizeURIComponent
Replace reserved characters from a segment of URI to make it compatible with rfc2396.
import { sanitizeURIComponent } from "mlly";
// foo_bar
console.log(sanitizeURIComponent(`foo:bar`));
sanitizeFilePath
Sanitize each path of a file name or path with sanitizeURIComponent
for URI compatibility.
import { sanitizeFilePath } from "mlly";
// C:/te_st/_...slug_.jsx'
console.log(sanitizeFilePath("C:\\te#st\\[...slug].jsx"));
parseNodeModulePath
Parses an absolute file path in node_modules
to three segments:
dir
: Path to main directory of packagename
: Package namesubpath
: The optional package subpath
It returns an empty object (with partial keys) if parsing fails.
import { parseNodeModulePath } from "mlly";
// dir: "/src/a/node_modules/"
// name: "lib"
// subpath: "./dist/index.mjs"
const { dir, name, subpath } = parseNodeModulePath(
"/src/a/node_modules/lib/dist/index.mjs",
);
lookupNodeModuleSubpath
Parses an absolute file path in node_modules
and tries to reverse lookup (or guess) the original package exports subpath for it.
import { lookupNodeModuleSubpath } from "mlly";
// subpath: "./utils"
const subpath = lookupNodeModuleSubpath(
"/src/a/node_modules/lib/dist/utils.mjs",
);
License
MIT - Made with 💛