Analyze which package.json
dependencies are in-use with V8 Coverage π₯
- π§Ή Tidy
package.json
Find out which dependencies are used/unused - π₯ V8 Coverage Uses Node's Coverage feature to accurately identify which modules are loaded
- π Pretty output View the results in a readable table. Save the output in JSON to view later
- π Ready-to-go Designed to be easy to use with
npx
βNo installation required!
$ npx deps [...Node command]
eg. npx deps npm run build
Install globally if you don't want to use it via npx.
npm i -g deps
Prefix your Node command with deps
and it will analyze and output the dependencies it used
$ deps ...
eg. deps npm run build
Prerequisite: install deps
globally
- Start recording dependecy usage (note the dot-space at the beginning)
$ . deps-start
- Run a series of Node scripts eg.
npm run dev
npm run build
npm run lint
- etc.
- Analyze used dependencies
$ deps analyze
- Save data to file:
deps analyze -o output.json
- Read later with:
deps -f output.json
- When you're done, stop recording
$ . deps-stop
deps
detects which modules are loaded by using V8's code coverage feature, so it's very accurate. However, it doesn't detect file-system reads, as they are simply read as text rather than actually being parsed and executed. That means it can't detect what files are statically analyzed by bundlers (eg. Webpack, Rollup, etc.). I am considering supporting FS reads in the future.
depcheck
statically analyzes your project to see which dependencies are imported, avoiding the need to execute code. In contrast, deps
executes code to analyze which dependencies were loaded during run-time. They work in completely different ways, but a major drawback for me is that depcheck
requires a "special" for supporting whether a module was loaded via dev-tools.
MIT