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85 lines
2.9 KiB
Markdown
85 lines
2.9 KiB
Markdown
## Integrity checking & lock files
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### Introduction
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Let's say your module depends on remote module `https://some.url/a.ts`. When you
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compile your module for the first time `a.ts` is retrieved, compiled and cached.
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It will remain this way until you run your module on a new machine (say in
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production) or reload the cache (through `deno cache --reload` for example). But
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what happens if the content in the remote url `https://some.url/a.ts` is
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changed? This could lead to your production module running with different
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dependency code than your local module. Deno's solution to avoid this is to use
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integrity checking and lock files.
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### Caching and lock files
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Deno can store and check subresource integrity for modules using a small JSON
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file. Use the `--lock=lock.json` to enable and specify lock file checking. To
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update or create a lock use `--lock=lock.json --lock-write`. The
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`--lock=lock.json` tells Deno what the lock file to use is, while the
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`--lock-write` is used to output dependency hashes to the lock file
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(`--lock-write` must be used in conjunction with `--lock`).
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A `lock.json` might look like this, storing a hash of the file against the
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dependency:
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```json
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{
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"https://deno.land/std@$STD_VERSION/textproto/mod.ts": "3118d7a42c03c242c5a49c2ad91c8396110e14acca1324e7aaefd31a999b71a4",
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"https://deno.land/std@$STD_VERSION/io/util.ts": "ae133d310a0fdcf298cea7bc09a599c49acb616d34e148e263bcb02976f80dee",
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"https://deno.land/std@$STD_VERSION/async/delay.ts": "35957d585a6e3dd87706858fb1d6b551cb278271b03f52c5a2cb70e65e00c26a",
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...
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}
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```
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A typical workflow will look like this:
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**src/deps.ts**
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```ts
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// Add a new dependency to "src/deps.ts", used somewhere else.
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export { xyz } from "https://unpkg.com/xyz-lib@v0.9.0/lib.ts";
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```
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Then:
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```shell
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# Create/update the lock file "lock.json".
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deno cache --lock=lock.json --lock-write src/deps.ts
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# Include it when committing to source control.
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git add -u lock.json
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git commit -m "feat: Add support for xyz using xyz-lib"
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git push
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```
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Collaborator on another machine -- in a freshly cloned project tree:
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```shell
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# Download the project's dependencies into the machine's cache, integrity
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# checking each resource.
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deno cache --reload --lock=lock.json src/deps.ts
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# Done! You can proceed safely.
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deno test --allow-read src
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```
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### Runtime verification
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Like caching above, you can also use the `--lock=lock.json` option during use of
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the `deno run` sub command, validating the integrity of any locked modules
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during the run. Remember that this only validates against dependencies
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previously added to the `lock.json` file. New dependencies will be cached but
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not validated.
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You can take this a step further as well by using the `--cached-only` flag to
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require that remote dependencies are already cached.
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```shell
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deno run --lock=lock.json --cached-only mod.ts
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```
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This will fail if there are any dependencies in the dependency tree for mod.ts
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which are not yet cached.
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<!-- TODO - Add detail on dynamic imports -->
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