🚨 Enforcement: Require all workspaces in a monorepo to conform to the One-Version rule.
📦 Supports multiple package managers: Support for yarn
classic, yarn
berry, and pnpm
workspaces.
💥 Coordinated upgrades: Coming Soon!
This package implements a version of Google's One-Version Rule
:
For every dependency in [a] repository, there must be only one version of that dependency to choose.2
Please refer to the implementation notes for our specific evaluation criteria.
There is some overlap between this tool and experimental yarn constraints, without requiring use of a particular package manager.
Install @wayfair/one-version
at the workspace root using yarn:
yarn add --dev -w @wayfair/one-version
Or pnpm:
pnpm add -save-dev -w @wayfair/one-version
Add the following section to your package.json:
{
"scripts": {
"one-version:check": "one-version check"
}
}
Run yarn one-version:check
or pnpm run one-version:check
.
If the repo is compliant, the tool will print this message:
✨ One Version Rule Success - found no version conflicts!
If the repo is not compliant, you will see a version of this message:
🚫 One Version Rule Failure - found multiple versions of the following dependencies:
prettier
2.1.2
dev: @wayfair/app-a, @wayfair/app-b
^2.3.2
dev: @wayfair/app-c
2.2.1
dev: @wayfair/lib-a
The behavior of @wayfair/one-version
can be configured by a one-version.config.json
at the root of the repository.
Overrides lets workspaces opt out of the one-version rule. This may be useful while performing major upgrades.
{
"overrides": {
"dependency": {
"versionSpecifier": ["workspaceA", "workspaceB"]
}
}
}
For example, the below config will allow app-A
and lib-L
to specify react@^16.9
, even if the rest of the repo specifies react@^17
.
{
"overrides": {
"react": {
"^16.9": ["app-A", "lib-L"]
}
}
}
Contributions are what make the open source community such an amazing place to learn, inspire, and create. Any contributions you make are greatly appreciated 💜. For contributing guidelines, please see CONTRIBUTING.md
Distributed under the MIT
License. See LICENSE
for more information.
1
: J.R.R. Tolkien, 1954. Mostly.
2
: Software Engineering At Google - Winters, Manshreck and Wright, 2020, p. 341