pnpm link
Aliases: ln
Torna o pacote local atual acessível em todo o sistema, ou em outro local.
pnpm link <dir>
pnpm link --global
pnpm link --global <pkg>
Opções
--dir <dir>, -C
- Padrão: Diretório de trabalho atual
- Tipo: string com o caminho
Altera a localização do link para <dir>
.
pnpm link <dir>
Vincula o pacote da pasta <dir>
ao node_modules do pacote de onde você está executando este comando ou especificado através da opção --dir
.
For example, if you are inside
~/projects/foo
and you executepnpm link --dir ../bar
, thenfoo
will be linked tobar/node_modules/foo
.
pnpm link --global
Links package from location where this command was executed or specified via --dir
option to global node_modules
, so it can be referred from another package with pnpm link --global <pkg>
. Also if the package has a bin
field, then the package's binaries become available system-wide.
pnpm link --global <pkg>
Vincula o pacote especificado (<pkg>
) do global node_modules
aos node_modules
do pacote de onde este comando foi executado ou especificado por meio da opção --dir
.
Use Cases
Replace an installed package with a local version of it
Let's say you have a project that uses foo
package. You want to make changes to foo
and test them in your project. In this scenario, you can use pnpm link
to link the local version of foo
to your project, while the package.json
won't be modified.
cd ~/projects/foo
pnpm install # install dependencies of foo
pnpm link --global # link foo globally
cd ~/projects/my-project
pnpm link --global foo # link foo to my-project
You can also link a package from a directory to another directory, without using the global node_modules
folder:
cd ~/projects/foo
pnpm install # install dependencies of foo
cd ~/projects/my-project
pnpm link ~/projects/foo # link foo to my-project
Add a binary globally
If you are developing a package that has a binary, for example, a CLI tool, you can use pnpm link --global
to make the binary available system-wide. This is the same as using pnpm install -g foo
, but it will use the local version of foo
instead of downloading it from the registry.
Remember that the binary will be available only if the package has a bin
field in its package.json
.
cd ~/projects/foo
pnpm install # install dependencies of foo
pnpm link --global # link foo globally
What's the difference between pnpm link
and using the file:
protocol?
When you use pnpm link
, the linked package is symlinked from the source code. You can modify the source code of the linked package, and the changes will be reflected in your project. With this method pnpm will not install the dependencies of the linked package, you will have to install them manually in the source code. This may be usefull when you have to use a specific package manager for the linked package, for example, if you want to use npm
for the linked package, but pnpm for your project.
When you use the file:
protocol in dependencies
, the linked package is hard-linked to your project node_modules
, you can modify the source code of the linked package, and the changes will be reflected in your project. With this method pnpm will also install the dependencies of the linked package, overriding the node_modules
of the linked package.
When dealing with peer dependencies it is recommended to use the file:
protocol. It better resolves the peer dependencies from the project dependencies, ensuring that the linked dependency correctly uses the versions of the dependencies specified in your main project, leading to more consistent and expected behaviors.
Recurso | pnpm link | file: Protocol |
---|---|---|
Symlink/Hard-link | Symlink | Hard-link |
Reflects source code modifications | Yes | Yes |
Installs dependencies of the linked package | No (manual installation required) | Yes (overrides node_modules of the linked package) |
Use different package manager for dependency | Possible (e.g., use npm for linked pkg) | No, it will use pnpm |