This library adds support for CommonJS modules (aka require
) inside a Nashorn script engine. It is based on the specification for NodeJS modules and it supports loading modules from the node_modules
folder just as Node does. Of course, it doesn't provide an implementation for Node's APIs, so any module that depends on those won't work.
It is somehow similar to jvm-npm which I used before, but it is 100% implemented in Java and supports loading files through other means than the filesystem; you only need to implement a simple interface and you should be good to go. Also, having the implementation in Java allows using it with a JS interpreter on which access to Java packages has been disabled for sandboxing purposes.
Out-of-the-box, the library supports loading modules from the filesystem and from Java resources.
Add this dependency to your pom.xml
to reference the library:
<dependency>
<groupId>com.coveo</groupId>
<artifactId>nashorn-commonjs-modules</artifactId>
<version>1.0.9</version>
</dependency>
Enabling require
in an existing Nashorn interpreter can be done very easily:
NashornScriptEngine engine = (NashornScriptEngine) new ScriptEngineManager().getEngineByName("nashorn");
Require.enable(engine, myRootFolder);
This will expose a new global require
function at the engine scope. Any code that is then run using this engine can make use of require
.
The second argument specifies the root Folder
from which modules are made available. Folder
is an interface exposing a few calls that need to be implemented by backing providers to enable loading files and accessing subfolders.
As of now, the library comes with built-in support for loading modules either through the filesystem or through Java resources.
Use the FilesystemFolder.create
method to create an implementation of Folder
rooted at a particular location in the filesystem:
FilesystemFolder rootFolder = FilesystemFolder.create(new File("/path/to/my/folder"), "UTF-8");
Require.enable(engine, rootFolder);
You need to specify the encoding of the files. Most of the time UTF-8 will be a reasonable choice.
The resulting folder is rooted at the path you specified, and JavaScript code won't be able to "escape" that root by using ../../..
. In other words, it behaves as is the root folder was the root of the filesystem.
Use the ResourceFolder.create
method to create an implementation of Folder
backed by Java resources:
ResourceFolder rootFolder = ResourceFolder.create(getClass().getClassLoader(), "com/coveo/nashorn_modules/test1", "UTF-8");
Require.enable(engine, rootFolder);
As for FilesystemFolder
, you need to specify the encoding for the files that are read.