Validate and visualise dependencies. With your rules. JavaScript. TypeScript. CoffeeScript. ES6, CommonJS, AMD.
This runs through the dependencies in any JavaScript, TypeScript, LiveScript or CoffeeScript project and ...
As a side effect it can generate dependency graphs in various output formats including cool visualizations you can stick on the wall to impress your grandma.
npm install --save-dev dependency-cruiser
# or
yarn add -D dependency-cruiser
pnpm add -D dependency-cruisernpx depcruise --initThis will look around in your environment a bit, ask you some questions and create
a .dependency-cruiser.js configuration file attuned to your project12.
To create a graph of the dependencies in your src folder, you'd run dependency
cruiser with output type dot and run GraphViz dot3 on the result. In
a one liner:
npx depcruise src --include-only "^src" --output-type dot | dot -T svg > dependency-graph.svgdependency-cruiser v12 and older: add --config option
While not necessary from dependency-cruiser v13 and later, in v12 and older you'll have to pass the --config option to make it find the .dependency-cruiser.js configuration file:
npx depcruise src --include-only "^src" --config --output-type dot | dot -T svg > dependency-graph.svg
--include-only and other command line
options in the command line interface documentation.mermaid, json, csv, html or plain text
we've got her covered
as well.When you ran depcruise --init above, the command also added some rules
to .dependency-cruiser.js that make sense in most projects, like detecting
circular dependencies, dependencies missing in package.json, orphans,
and production code relying on dev- or optionalDependencies.
Start adding your own rules by tweaking that file.
Sample rule:
{
"forbidden": [
{
"name": "not-to-test",
"comment": "don't allow dependencies from outside the test folder to test",
"severity": "error",
"from": { "pathNot": "^test" },
"to": { "path": "^test" }
}
]
}npx depcruise srcdependency-cruiser v12 and older: add --config option
While not necessary from dependency-cruiser v13, in v12 and older you'll have to pass the --config option to make it find the .dependency-cruiser.js configuration file:
npx depcruise --config .dependency-cruiser.js src
This will validate against your rules and shows any violations in an eslint-like format:
There's more ways to report validations; in a graph (like the one on top of this
readme) or in an self-containing html file.
depcruise script in the
package.jsonYou've come to the right place :-) :
MIT
Made with ? in Holland.
We're using npx in the example scripts for convenience. When you use the
commands in a script in package.json it's not necessary to prefix them with
npx. ↩
If you don't want to use npx, but instead pnpx (from the pnpm
package manager) or yarn - please refer to that tool's documentation.
Particularly pnpx has semantics that differ from npx quite significantly
and that you want to be aware of before using it. In the mean time: npx
should work even when you installed the dependency with a package manager
different from npm. ↩
This assumes the GraphViz dot command is available - on most linux and
comparable systems this will be. In case it's not, see
GraphViz' download page for instructions
on how to get it on your machine. ↩