react-code-dataset / wp-calypso /docs /dependency-management.md
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Dependency management

This project uses yarn v3 to manage its dependencies. It uses workspaces[https://yarnpkg.com/features/workspaces] functionality to manage the monorepo.

Working with sub-packages

In this context, a 'sub-package' is any package of the monorepo. That includes ./packages/*, ./client and ./apps/*.

With yarn, there are two different modes to work with a sub-package:

Option 1: Go to the directory that contains the package and run regular yarn commands. Example:

cd packages/calypso-analytics
yarn add ...

Option 2: Run yarn commands in teh root of the project, but prepend workspace <packageName>. Example

yarn workspace @automattic/calypso-analytics add...

Both options are equivalent, is a matter of personal preference. For the rest of this guide, the examples will follow Option 1.

Common tasks

Add a new dependency

cd <package-dir>
yarn add <dependency>

# Example:
# cd packages/calypso-analytics
# yarn add lodash

You should add dependencies to the root project only when it will be used to test and/or build other packages. To do this, run:

yarn add -w <dependency>

Unpublished package as a dependency

Sometimes you'll want to create a package and use it as another workspace's dependency before it's published. To add such dependency, make sure you specify its exact version because otherwise, yarn will try to resolve it from the npm registry and throw the Not found error.

Let's say you created a polyfill package and want to add it as a dependency to packages/calypso-polyfills. Doing this will make yarn resolve to your fresh (unpublished) package and install it as a symlink:

cd packages/calypso-polyfills
yarn add @automattic/my-awesome-polyfill@1.0.0

That's it! Don't forget to publish the package after merging your PR!

Delete a dependency

cd <package-dir>
yarn remove <dependency>

# Example:
# cd packages/calypso-analytics
# yarn remove lodash

To delete a dependency of the root project, run:

yarn remove -w lodash

Update a dependency

Run

yarn up <package>

# Example
# yarn up react-query

Note that this won't change the required range of react-query (i.e. it won't modify package.json). Instead, it will try to update react-query and any of its dependencies to the highest version that satisfies the specified range. For example, if we declare a dependency on react-query@^2.24.0 it may update react-query to 2.24.1, but never to 3.0.0.

Update a dependency to a new range

Run

yarn up <package>@^<semver-range>

# Example
# yarn up react-query@^3.0.0

As before, it will update react-query and all its dependencies. But in this case, it will change the required range (i.e. it will modify package.json)

List oudated dependencies

Run

yarn outdated

Note that the output includes which sub-package has the dependency. It is possible that the same dependency is present in many sub-packages (or even in the root project).

List duplicated dependencies

Run

yarn dedupe --check

It is recommended to run this command after adding a new dependency and fix potential duplications with yarn dedupe

Differences with npm

Running scripts

When working with yarn we don't have to specify run in the command line:

# Before:
npm run build-client

# After:
yarn build-client

Other

Check the official documentation to see more equivalences between npm and yarn commands.