# Pirates [![Version][version-badge]][npm-link] [![Build Status][build-badge]][build-link] [![Coverage][codecov-badge]][codecov-link] [![Commitizen friendly][cz-badge]][cz-link] [![semantic-release][sr-badge]][sr-link] [![MIT License][license-badge]][license-link] ### Properly hijack require [version-badge]: https://img.shields.io/npm/v/pirates.svg "npm version" [downloads-badge]: https://img.shields.io/npm/dm/pirates.svg "npm downloads" [npm-link]: http://npm.im/pirates "npm" [codecov-badge]: https://img.shields.io/codecov/c/github/ariporad/pirates/master.svg?style=flat "codecov" [codecov-link]: https://codecov.io/gh/ariporad/pirates "codecov" [license-badge]: https://img.shields.io/npm/l/express.svg "MIT License" [license-link]: http://ariporad.mit-license.org "MIT License" [build-badge]: https://travis-ci.org/ariporad/pirates.svg "Travis CI Build Status" [build-link]: https://travis-ci.org/ariporad/pirates "Travis CI Build Status" [cz-badge]: https://img.shields.io/badge/commitizen-friendly-brightgreen.svg "Commitizen friendly" [cz-link]: http://commitizen.github.io/cz-cli/ "Commitizen friendly" [sr-badge]: https://img.shields.io/badge/%20%20%F0%9F%93%A6%F0%9F%9A%80-semantic--release-e10079.svg [sr-link]: https://github.com/semantic-release/semantic-release ## Why? Two reasons: 1. Babel and istanbul were breaking each other. 2. Everyone seemed to re-invent the wheel on this, and everyone wanted a solution that was DRY, simple, easy to use, and made everything Just Work™, while allowing multiple require hooks, in a fashion similar to calling `super`. For some context, see [the Babel issue thread][] which started this all, then [the nyc issue thread][], where discussion was moved (as we began to discuss just using the code nyc had developed), and finally to [#1][issue-1] where discussion was finally moved. [the Babel issue thread]: https://github.com/babel/babel/pull/3062 "Babel Issue Thread" [the nyc issue thread]: https://github.com/bcoe/nyc/issues/70 "NYC Issue Thread" [issue-1]: https://github.com/ariporad/pirates/issues/1 "Issue #1" ## Installation npm install --save pirates ## Usage Using pirates is really easy: ```javascript // my-module/register.js const addHook = require('pirates').addHook; // Or if you use ES modules // import { addHook } from 'pirates'; function matcher(filename) { // Here, you can inspect the filename to determine if it should be hooked or // not. Just return a truthy/falsey. Files in node_modules are automatically ignored, // unless otherwise specified in options (see below). // TODO: Implement your logic here return true; } const revert = addHook( (code, filename) => code.replace('@@foo', 'console.log(\'foo\');'), { exts: ['.js'], matcher } ); // And later, if you want to un-hook require, you can just do: revert(); ``` ## API ### pirates.addHook(hook, [opts={ [matcher: true], [exts: ['.js']], [ignoreNodeModules: true] }]); Add a require hook. `hook` must be a function that takes `(code, filename)`, and returns the modified code. `opts` is an optional options object. Available options are: `matcher`, which is a function that accepts a filename, and returns a truthy value if the file should be hooked (defaults to a function that always returns true), falsey if otherwise; `exts`, which is an array of extensions to hook, they should begin with `.` (defaults to `['.js']`); `ignoreNodeModules`, if true, any file in a `node_modules` folder wont be hooked (the matcher also wont be called), if false, then the matcher will be called for any files in `node_modules` (defaults to true). ## Projects that use Pirates See the [wiki page](https://github.com/ariporad/pirates/wiki/Projects-using-Pirates). If you add Pirates to your project, (And you should! It works best if everyone uses it. Then we can have a happy world full of happy require hooks!), please add yourself to the wiki. ## License [MIT](http://ariporad.mit-license.org)