305 lines
9.3 KiB
Markdown
305 lines
9.3 KiB
Markdown
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<p align="center">
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<a href="http://liftoffjs.com">
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<img height="100" width="297" src="https://cdn.rawgit.com/tkellen/js-liftoff/master/artwork/liftoff.svg"/>
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</a>
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</p>
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# liftoff [![Build Status](https://secure.travis-ci.org/js-cli/js-liftoff.svg)](http://travis-ci.org/js-cli/js-liftoff) [![Build status](https://ci.appveyor.com/api/projects/status/5a6w8xuq8ed1ilc4/branch/master?svg=true)](https://ci.appveyor.com/project/js-cli/js-liftoff/branch/master)
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> Launch your command line tool with ease.
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[![NPM](https://nodei.co/npm/liftoff.png)](https://nodei.co/npm/liftoff/)
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## What is it?
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[See this blog post](http://weblog.bocoup.com/building-command-line-tools-in-node-with-liftoff/), [check out this proof of concept](https://github.com/js-cli/js-hacker), or read on.
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Say you're writing a CLI tool. Let's call it [hacker](https://github.com/js-cli/js-hacker). You want to configure it using a `Hackerfile`. This is node, so you install `hacker` locally for each project you use it in. But, in order to get the `hacker` command in your PATH, you also install it globally.
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Now, when you run `hacker`, you want to configure what it does using the `Hackerfile` in your current directory, and you want it to execute using the local installation of your tool. Also, it'd be nice if the `hacker` command was smart enough to traverse up your folders until it finds a `Hackerfile`—for those times when you're not in the root directory of your project. Heck, you might even want to launch `hacker` from a folder outside of your project by manually specifying a working directory. Liftoff manages this for you.
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So, everything is working great. Now you can find your local `hacker` and `Hackerfile` with ease. Unfortunately, it turns out you've authored your `Hackerfile` in coffee-script, or some other JS variant. In order to support *that*, you have to load the compiler for it, and then register the extension for it with node. Good news, Liftoff can do that, and a whole lot more, too.
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## API
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### constructor(opts)
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Create an instance of Liftoff to invoke your application.
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An example utilizing all options:
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```js
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const Hacker = new Liftoff({
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name: 'hacker',
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processTitle: 'hacker',
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moduleName: 'hacker',
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configName: 'hackerfile',
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extensions: {
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'.js': null,
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'.json': null,
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'.coffee': 'coffee-script/register'
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},
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v8flags: ['--harmony'] // or v8flags: require('v8flags')
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});
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```
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#### opts.name
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Sugar for setting `processTitle`, `moduleName`, `configName` automatically.
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Type: `String`
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Default: `null`
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These are equivalent:
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```js
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const Hacker = Liftoff({
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processTitle: 'hacker',
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moduleName: 'hacker',
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configName: 'hackerfile'
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});
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```
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```js
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const Hacker = Liftoff({name:'hacker'});
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```
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#### opts.moduleName
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Sets which module your application expects to find locally when being run.
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Type: `String`
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Default: `null`
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#### opts.configName
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Sets the name of the configuration file Liftoff will attempt to find. Case-insensitive.
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Type: `String`
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Default: `null`
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#### opts.extensions
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Set extensions to include when searching for a configuration file. If an external module is needed to load a given extension (e.g. `.coffee`), the module name should be specified as the value for the key.
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Type: `Object`
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Default: `{".js":null,".json":null}`
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**Examples:**
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In this example Liftoff will look for `myappfile{.js,.json,.coffee}`. If a config with the extension `.coffee` is found, Liftoff will try to require `coffee-script/require` from the current working directory.
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```js
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const MyApp = new Liftoff({
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name: 'myapp',
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extensions: {
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'.js': null,
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'.json': null,
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'.coffee': 'coffee-script/register'
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}
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});
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```
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In this example, Liftoff will look for `.myapp{rc}`.
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```js
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const MyApp = new Liftoff({
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name: 'myapp',
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configName: '.myapp',
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extensions: {
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'rc': null
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}
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});
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```
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In this example, Liftoff will automatically attempt to load the correct module for any javascript variant supported by [node-interpret](https://github.com/tkellen/node-interpret) (as long as it does not require a register method).
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```js
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const MyApp = new Liftoff({
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name: 'myapp',
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extensions: require('interpret').jsVariants
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});
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```
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#### opts.v8flags
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Any flag specified here will be applied to node, not your program. Useful for supporting invocations like `myapp --harmony command`, where `--harmony` should be passed to node, not your program. This functionality is implemented using [flagged-respawn](http://github.com/tkellen/node-flagged-respawn). To support all v8flags, see [node-v8flags](https://github.com/tkellen/node-v8flags).
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Type: `Array|Function`
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Default: `null`
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If this method is a function, it should take a node-style callback that yields an array of flags.
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#### opts.processTitle
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Sets what the [process title](http://nodejs.org/api/process.html#process_process_title) will be.
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Type: `String`
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Default: `null`
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#### opts.completions(type)
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A method to handle bash/zsh/whatever completions.
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Type: `Function`
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Default: `null`
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## launch(opts, callback(env))
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Launches your application with provided options, builds an environment, and invokes your callback, passing the calculated environment as the first argument.
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##### Example Configuration w/ Options Parsing:
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```js
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const Liftoff = require('liftoff');
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const MyApp = new Liftoff({name:'myapp'});
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const argv = require('minimist')(process.argv.slice(2));
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const invoke = function (env) {
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console.log('my environment is:', env);
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console.log('my cli options are:', argv);
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console.log('my liftoff config is:', this);
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};
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MyApp.launch({
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cwd: argv.cwd,
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configPath: argv.myappfile,
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require: argv.require,
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completion: argv.completion
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}, invoke);
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```
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#### opts.cwd
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Change the current working directory for this launch. Relative paths are calculated against `process.cwd()`.
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Type: `String`
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Default: `process.cwd()`
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**Example Configuration:**
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```js
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const argv = require('minimist')(process.argv.slice(2));
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MyApp.launch({
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cwd: argv.cwd
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}, invoke);
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```
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**Matching CLI Invocation:**
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```
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myapp --cwd ../
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```
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#### opts.configPath
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Don't search for a config, use the one provided. **Note:** Liftoff will assume the current working directory is the directory containing the config file unless an alternate location is explicitly specified using `cwd`.
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Type: `String`
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Default: `null`
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**Example Configuration:**
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```js
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var argv = require('minimist')(process.argv.slice(2));
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MyApp.launch({
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configPath: argv.myappfile
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}, invoke);
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```
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**Matching CLI Invocation:**
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```
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myapp --myappfile /var/www/project/Myappfile.js
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```
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**Examples using `cwd` and `configPath` together:**
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These are functionally identical:
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```
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myapp --myappfile /var/www/project/Myappfile.js
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myapp --cwd /var/www/project
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```
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These can run myapp from a shared directory as though it were located in another project:
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```
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myapp --myappfile /Users/name/Myappfile.js --cwd /var/www/project1
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myapp --myappfile /Users/name/Myappfile.js --cwd /var/www/project2
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```
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#### opts.require
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A string or array of modules to attempt requiring from the local working directory before invoking the launch callback.
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Type: `String|Array`
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Default: `null`
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**Example Configuration:**
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```js
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var argv = require('minimist')(process.argv.slice(2));
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MyApp.launch({
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require: argv.require
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}, invoke);
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```
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**Matching CLI Invocation:**
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```js
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myapp --require coffee-script/register
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```
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#### callback(env)
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A function to start your application. When invoked, `this` will be your instance of Liftoff. The `env` param will contain the following keys:
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- `cwd`: the current working directory
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- `require`: an array of modules that liftoff tried to pre-load
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- `configNameSearch`: the config files searched for
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- `configPath`: the full path to your configuration file (if found)
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- `configBase`: the base directory of your configuration file (if found)
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- `modulePath`: the full path to the local module your project relies on (if found)
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- `modulePackage`: the contents of the local module's package.json (if found)
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### events
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#### require(name, module)
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Emitted when a module is pre-loaded.
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```js
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var Hacker = new Liftoff({name:'hacker'});
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Hacker.on('require', function (name, module) {
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console.log('Requiring external module: '+name+'...');
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// automatically register coffee-script extensions
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if (name === 'coffee-script') {
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module.register();
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}
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});
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```
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#### requireFail(name, err)
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Emitted when a requested module cannot be preloaded.
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```js
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var Hacker = new Liftoff({name:'hacker'});
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Hacker.on('requireFail', function (name, err) {
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console.log('Unable to load:', name, err);
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});
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```
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#### respawn(flags, child)
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Emitted when Liftoff re-spawns your process (when a [`nodeFlag`](#optsnodeflags) is detected).
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```js
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var Hacker = new Liftoff({
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name: 'hacker',
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nodeFlags: ['--harmony']
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});
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Hacker.on('respawn', function (flags, child) {
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console.log('Detected node flags:', flags);
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console.log('Respawned to PID:', child.pid);
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});
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```
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Event will be triggered for this command:
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`hacker --harmony commmand`
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## Examples
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Check out how [gulp](https://github.com/gulpjs/gulp/blob/master/bin/gulp.js) uses Liftoff.
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For a bare-bones example, try [the hacker project](https://github.com/js-cli/js-hacker/blob/master/bin/hacker.js).
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To try the example, do the following:
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1. Install the sample project `hacker` with `npm install -g hacker`.
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2. Make a `Hackerfile.js` with some arbitrary javascript it.
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3. Install hacker next to it with `npm install hacker`.
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3. Run `hacker` while in the same parent folder.
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