iandotkelly / nlf

Node License Finder
MIT License
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Node License Finder (nlf)

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nlf is a utility for attempting to identify the licenses of modules in a node.js project.

It looks for license information in package.json, readme and license files in the project. Please note, in many cases the utility is looking for standard strings in these files, such as MIT, BSD, Apache, GPL etc - this is not error free, so if you have any concerns at all about the accuracy of the results, you will need to perform a detailed manual review of the project and its dependencies, reading all terms of any included or referenced license.

Use

nlf can be used programmatically, or from the command line.

Options

CLI

To install:

$ npm install -g nlf

To use:

$ cd my-module
$ nlf

Example output:

archy@0.0.2 [license(s): MIT/X11]
└── package.json:  MIT/X11

commander@0.6.1 [license(s): MIT]
└── readme files: MIT

glob@3.2.3 [license(s): BSD]
├── package.json:  BSD
└── license files: BSD

json-stringify-safe@5.0.0 [license(s): BSD]
├── package.json:  BSD
└── license files: BSD

read-installed@0.2.2 [license(s): BSD]
└── license files: BSD

should@1.2.2 [license(s): MIT]
└── readme files: MIT

LICENSES: BSD, MIT, MIT/X11

For output in CSV format use the -c (or --csv) switch:

$ cd my-module
$ nlf -c

To exclude development dependencies and only analyze dependencies for production:

$ cd my-module
$ nlf -d

Summary Mode

--summary <mode> option, which can be set to "off", "simple" or "detail". This option controls what will be printed in summary in standard format.

LICENSES:
├─┬ BSD
│ ├── amdefine@1.0.0
│ ├── boom@0.4.2
│ ├── cryptiles@0.2.2
│ └── diff@1.4.0
├─┬ BSD-2-Clause
│ └── normalize-package-data@2.3.5
├─┬ Apache-2.0
│ ├── request@2.40.0
│ ├── spdx-correct@1.0.2
│ └── validate-npm-package-license@3.0.1
├─┬ (MIT AND CC-BY-3.0)
│ └── spdx-expression-parse@1.0.1
└─┬ MPL
  └── tough-cookie@2.2.1

Programmatically

var nlf = require('nlf');

nlf.find({ directory: '/User/me/my-project' }, function (err, data) {
    // do something with the response object.
    console.log(JSON.stringify(data));
});

// to only include production dependencies
nlf.find({
    directory: '/User/me/my-project',
    production: true
}, function (err, data) {
    // do something with the response object.
    console.log(JSON.stringify(data));
});

The data returned from find() is an array of modules, each of which is represented by an object as the following example:

{
  "id": "example@0.2.9",
  "name": "example",
  "version": "0.2.9",
  "repository": "http:\/\/github.com\/iandotkelly\/example",
  "directory": "\/Users\/ian\/example",
  "licenseSources": {
    "package": {
      "sources": [
        {
          "license": "MIT",
          "url": "http://opensource.org/MIT"
        }
      ]
    },
    "license": {
      "sources": [
        {
          "filePath": "\/Users\/ian\/Personal\/example\/LICENSE",
          "text": "the text of the license file",
          "names": function() { // function that returns the name of the license if known }
        }
      ]
    },
    "readme": {
      "sources": [
        {
          "filePath": "\/Users\/ian\/Personal\/example\/readme.md",
          "text": "text of the readme"
          "names": function() { // function that returns the name of the license if known }
        }
      ]
    }
  }
}

Each

Tests

To run the unit tests, install development dependencies and run tests with 'gulp'. Requires gulp.js to be installed globally.

# only need to install gulp if you have not done so already
$ npm install -g gulp
$ cd nlf
$ npm install
$ gulp

If you contribute to the project, tests are written in mocha, using should.js or the node.js assert module.